@rhondasole: Quick weave update 🧡 @Ramiss Hair #quickweave #tiktokbundles #affordablebundles #tiktokshopfinds #flexirods

Rhonda Beauty Creator
Rhonda Beauty Creator
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Region: US
Friday 27 March 2026 16:19:11 GMT
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0naya_1
Nayalie :
ur gorgeous
2026-06-22 15:26:25
1
ze_mi.xh
Zemiah💕 :
This is cutee what inches did u get?
2026-06-15 20:39:13
0
haitiannmami
haitiannmami :
Oh girl this tea
2026-04-29 04:32:42
1
mylah.divine
mylah.divine🖤 :
would you say this hair good for a sew in ?
2026-05-01 12:46:47
0
makeupsusanm1023
Makeupsusanm :
😍😍😍
2026-03-28 04:18:46
1
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“How many umbrellas are used in London on a rainy day?” First, clarify the question. In an interview, I’d say:   “I’ll interpret this as umbrellas actively being used outdoors on a typical rainy weekday in London.” --- Now size it. Start with London population.   👉 ~9 million people Now estimate working age adults. Assume: - average lifespan is ~80 years   - population is roughly evenly distributed by age   - working age is roughly 20–60   That’s 40 years out of 80.   👉 50% of the population 👉 9m × 50% = ~4.5 million working age adults --- Now estimate who is outside. Assume: - people commute roughly 3 days per week on average   - plus some additional travel for meetings, errands, etc. So on a given weekday, assume ~60% are travelling around the city 👉 4.5m × 60% = ~2.5–3 million commuters Then add: - students   - tourists   - shoppers / leisure trips   👉 another ~1 million people outdoors So in total:   👉 ~4 million people outside on a rainy weekday --- Next: who actually uses umbrellas? Not everyone does. Some people: - wear hoods   - use coats   - or just ignore the rain because it’s London Assume ~75% use umbrellas when it rains   👉 ~3 million umbrella users --- One final evaluation: I simplified the commuter assumption quite heavily. In reality: - commuter behaviour varies by industry   - hybrid working differs person-to-person   - and rainy weather itself may reduce travel volumes So you could argue the number of people outside is slightly lower than my estimate - which would reduce the total umbrella count as well. --- So final answer:   👉 ~3 million umbrellas are used in London on a rainy day --- That’s how you answer it well:   Clarify the metric.   Build from behaviour.   Keep the maths clean. Evaluate at the end.   Save this so you can use the structure for your next interview
“How many umbrellas are used in London on a rainy day?” First, clarify the question. In an interview, I’d say: “I’ll interpret this as umbrellas actively being used outdoors on a typical rainy weekday in London.” --- Now size it. Start with London population. 👉 ~9 million people Now estimate working age adults. Assume: - average lifespan is ~80 years - population is roughly evenly distributed by age - working age is roughly 20–60 That’s 40 years out of 80. 👉 50% of the population 👉 9m × 50% = ~4.5 million working age adults --- Now estimate who is outside. Assume: - people commute roughly 3 days per week on average - plus some additional travel for meetings, errands, etc. So on a given weekday, assume ~60% are travelling around the city 👉 4.5m × 60% = ~2.5–3 million commuters Then add: - students - tourists - shoppers / leisure trips 👉 another ~1 million people outdoors So in total: 👉 ~4 million people outside on a rainy weekday --- Next: who actually uses umbrellas? Not everyone does. Some people: - wear hoods - use coats - or just ignore the rain because it’s London Assume ~75% use umbrellas when it rains 👉 ~3 million umbrella users --- One final evaluation: I simplified the commuter assumption quite heavily. In reality: - commuter behaviour varies by industry - hybrid working differs person-to-person - and rainy weather itself may reduce travel volumes So you could argue the number of people outside is slightly lower than my estimate - which would reduce the total umbrella count as well. --- So final answer: 👉 ~3 million umbrellas are used in London on a rainy day --- That’s how you answer it well: Clarify the metric. Build from behaviour. Keep the maths clean. Evaluate at the end. Save this so you can use the structure for your next interview

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