@fall_3478: #tarot #feast #lyricsvideo #fyp

Fallnstu
Fallnstu
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Monday 16 June 2025 00:20:49 GMT
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bowoo15__
Bowoo :
Kesimpulan: Lagu "Tarot" adalah eksplorasi tentang bagaimana manusia menghadapi takdir, kepercayaan, dan pencarian makna hidup di tengah kompleksitas kehidupan modern..Feast ingin mengajak pendengar untuk tidak hanya menerima apa yang ada, tetapi juga mempertanyakan dan merenungkan peran mereka di dunia ini.
2025-06-17 03:11:35
6673
rezznew2
! :
tarot is favorite song
2026-02-12 11:50:25
1
kenakpelangaran
Shinigami💤 :
Tanpa sadar mutar tarot; berulang ulang😅
2025-06-18 02:08:38
43
14why1
@Leonn15 :
“selalu menertawakan ramalan bintang kartu tarot“
2025-06-17 11:08:43
1360
putunokta
nokta_Widarma :
di kehidupan kedua
2025-09-07 04:28:29
13
kidammaubobo
k :
nina or tarot?
2025-07-03 16:04:59
10
salwaaaciww_
saaa :
waduh...
2025-08-24 14:35:15
272
dikz0976
dikluvluv :
tarot lagu atau kisah nyata??
2025-06-17 11:59:37
605
_jexwho27
j :
di kehidupan ke dua "ke dua"
2025-06-17 10:00:29
205
vinsmok.tanzz
FANXZYY :
percaya tarot haram GK si
2025-12-25 11:21:07
31
_laa660
🐚★laa°♧🫧 :
"namun aku bingung kenapa ku tak pergi".
2025-06-17 12:57:36
233
rizzholic91
RIZZTHY. :
lagu feast the best semua😭
2025-10-03 01:55:57
14
lannluvluv
yh ada maul bjir :
orang pintar pembaca yasin
2025-06-24 18:26:09
174
karangan145
Akmal TR :
2025-07-30 00:05:55
18
sanzgacordikit
Sanzz Sudahh China :
baskara ini the real cugg psikolog berkedok vokalis😭
2025-06-27 01:48:27
49
hlmyy13
hYl :
“selalu menertawakan ramalan bintang kartu tarot“
2025-06-17 12:34:15
33
1cceeyy
☆ :
@🐚★laa°♧🫧:"namun aku bingung kenapa ku tak pergi".
2025-06-18 13:52:03
9
abigael_lie
Okt-Skuy :
"org pintar remaja masjid"
2025-06-17 23:23:04
28
aku_siapa6506
kyutabizz👀 :
"orang pintar minum tolak angin"
2026-02-01 03:09:46
6
clippertimkam
Clipper Timothy,Sc :
Namun aku bingung kenapa ku tak pergi artinya sudah disakiti tapi tetap masih bertahan karena kalau pergi lebih sakit tapi bertahan juga sakit jadi serba salah sama² sakit
2025-07-19 10:21:38
7
caaa2224
caaa :
"smga kau tak terlalu keras kepala"
2025-06-17 18:46:42
6
rey_http
Yoruᛉ :
orang pintar pembaca nasi🗿
2025-07-24 14:02:57
15
frida_via
pii_silpii🤏🏻 :
aduh cara berhenti dengerin tarot itu gmn, ini lagi ter tarot tarot
2025-07-01 13:34:27
9
putraaa_2114
🥷 :
tarot mna yg ga gua like?
2025-06-17 12:08:31
6
4lee_30
alee :
tolong boleh liat story ku?
2025-06-22 01:09:06
13
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My favorite Actor's 51 birthday! I made him dance in front of his home. Wish him happy birthday 🥰 Graham's number is an unimaginably large finite integer that famously served as the upper bound for a solution in Ramsey theory. It is so immense that if you tried to write it out, the entire observable universe could not hold the digits, assuming each digit was the size of a single atom.The OriginsIt was conceived in 1977 by mathematician Ronald Graham while working on a problem in Ramsey theory involving \(n\)-dimensional hypercubes. He needed to prove the existence of a specific geometrical configuration and established Graham's number as the upper limit for when this configuration must occur.How It's WrittenBecause standard scientific notation like \(10^{100}\) (a googol) is far too weak, mathematicians use Knuth's up-arrow notation to express hyper-operations and exponential power towers.One arrow (\(\uparrow \)): Standard exponentiation. (e.g., \(3 \uparrow 3 = 3^3 = 27\))Two arrows (\(\uparrow\uparrow\)): A tower of powers (tetration). (e.g., \(3 \uparrow\uparrow 3\) means \(3^{3^{3}}\), which is \(3^{27}\) or about 7.6 trillion)Three arrows (\(\uparrow\uparrow\uparrow\)): Rapidly repeating the two-arrow operation.Four arrows (\(\uparrow\uparrow\uparrow\uparrow\)): This is where the scale shatters. \(3 \uparrow\uparrow\uparrow\uparrow 3\) produces a tower of powers so tall the number of layers itself is defined by the previous 3-arrow operation.The 64 IterationsGraham's number is reached by taking the 4-arrow operation and applying it in a recursive chain, 64 total times.Let \(g_1 = 3 \uparrow\uparrow\uparrow\uparrow 3\).To find \(g_{2}\), you write the number \(3\) followed by \(g_{1}\) arrows, followed by \(3\).You repeat this process 64 times.Graham's number is \(g_{64}\).Mind-Blowing FactsIt's Too Big for the Universe: If every fundamental particle in the visible universe were a subatomic notepad and could store millions of digits, the universe would still run out of space long before writing out the full number.We Know How It Ends: Despite its incomprehensible size, mathematicians actually know exactly what the last few digits are (for instance, its last ten digits are \(2464195387\)).It's Not the Largest: While it held a Guinness World Record for the largest number ever used in a mathematical proof, mathematicians have since established even larger numbers (like TREE(3) and Rayo's number) for other specialized proofs.
My favorite Actor's 51 birthday! I made him dance in front of his home. Wish him happy birthday 🥰 Graham's number is an unimaginably large finite integer that famously served as the upper bound for a solution in Ramsey theory. It is so immense that if you tried to write it out, the entire observable universe could not hold the digits, assuming each digit was the size of a single atom.The OriginsIt was conceived in 1977 by mathematician Ronald Graham while working on a problem in Ramsey theory involving \(n\)-dimensional hypercubes. He needed to prove the existence of a specific geometrical configuration and established Graham's number as the upper limit for when this configuration must occur.How It's WrittenBecause standard scientific notation like \(10^{100}\) (a googol) is far too weak, mathematicians use Knuth's up-arrow notation to express hyper-operations and exponential power towers.One arrow (\(\uparrow \)): Standard exponentiation. (e.g., \(3 \uparrow 3 = 3^3 = 27\))Two arrows (\(\uparrow\uparrow\)): A tower of powers (tetration). (e.g., \(3 \uparrow\uparrow 3\) means \(3^{3^{3}}\), which is \(3^{27}\) or about 7.6 trillion)Three arrows (\(\uparrow\uparrow\uparrow\)): Rapidly repeating the two-arrow operation.Four arrows (\(\uparrow\uparrow\uparrow\uparrow\)): This is where the scale shatters. \(3 \uparrow\uparrow\uparrow\uparrow 3\) produces a tower of powers so tall the number of layers itself is defined by the previous 3-arrow operation.The 64 IterationsGraham's number is reached by taking the 4-arrow operation and applying it in a recursive chain, 64 total times.Let \(g_1 = 3 \uparrow\uparrow\uparrow\uparrow 3\).To find \(g_{2}\), you write the number \(3\) followed by \(g_{1}\) arrows, followed by \(3\).You repeat this process 64 times.Graham's number is \(g_{64}\).Mind-Blowing FactsIt's Too Big for the Universe: If every fundamental particle in the visible universe were a subatomic notepad and could store millions of digits, the universe would still run out of space long before writing out the full number.We Know How It Ends: Despite its incomprehensible size, mathematicians actually know exactly what the last few digits are (for instance, its last ten digits are \(2464195387\)).It's Not the Largest: While it held a Guinness World Record for the largest number ever used in a mathematical proof, mathematicians have since established even larger numbers (like TREE(3) and Rayo's number) for other specialized proofs.

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