@gau.family.qm: Dâu ơi đừng buồn. Hôm nay chỉ là vòng sơ tuyển 😅#vietnamdeutschland🇩🇪 #xuhướng #videoviral #baby

Hallo nhà Gấu đây ❤️
Hallo nhà Gấu đây ❤️
Open In TikTok:
Region: DE
Saturday 19 April 2025 09:20:45 GMT
698
10
3
1

Music

Download

Comments

gonbap1103
Gonbap1103 :
Mấy bữa nữa có thể đi hái rồi 😋
2025-04-20 08:25:41
1
gonbap1103
Gonbap1103 :
Dâu mùa nay chưa ngon lắm 😊
2025-04-19 21:50:12
0
To see more videos from user @gau.family.qm, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

another edit of the Marsey cat :))) #wpd #marseythecatedit #shooter #OSTJEORBASS #telegram Graham's number is a giant number that is an upper bound for the solution of a certain problem in Ramsey theory. It is a very large power of three, written using Knuth notation. It is named after Ronald Graham. It became known to the general public after Martin Gardner described it in his
another edit of the Marsey cat :))) #wpd #marseythecatedit #shooter #OSTJEORBASS #telegram Graham's number is a giant number that is an upper bound for the solution of a certain problem in Ramsey theory. It is a very large power of three, written using Knuth notation. It is named after Ronald Graham. It became known to the general public after Martin Gardner described it in his "Mathematical Games" column in Scientific American in November 1977, where he said: "In an unpublished proof, Graham recently established a bound so large that it holds the record for the largest number ever used in a serious mathematical proof." In 1980, the Guinness Book of World Records repeated Gardner's claims, further fueling public interest in the number. Graham's number is an unimaginable number of times larger than other well-known large numbers, such as a googol, a googolplex, and even larger than Skewes' number and Moser's larger than Skewes' number and Moser's number. The entire observable universe is too small to contain the ordinary decimal notation of Graham's number (each digit is assumed to occupy at least the Planck volume). Even power towers of the formabc... Bare useless for this purpose (in the same sense), although the number can be written using recursive formulas such as Knuth notation or equivalent, which is what Graham did. The last 500 digits of Graham's number are [source not specified 781 days ] ...024259506950647383956574791365193517 98334535362521 4300354012602677162267216041981065226 3169355188780 3881448314065252616878509555264605107 1172000997092 9124954437888749606288291172506300130 3622931916080 2545946149457887142783235082924210209 1825896753560 4308699380168924988926809951016905591 9951195027887 1783083701834023647454888222216157322 8010132974509 273445945043433009010969280253527518 33289884461508 9404248265018193851562535796399618993 9679054966380 032223487239670184851864390591045756 27262464195387. In modern mathematical proofs, numbers even much larger than Graham's number sometimes occur, for example in work on the finite Friedmann form of Kruskal's theorem, the so-called TREE(3).

About