View allAll Photos Tagged Multiplication
I have no idea what this chalkboard meaning is. But I am impressed they arrived at the correct answers without showing the process I was taught.
The Church of the Multiplication of the Loaves and Fish is a Roman Catholic church located in Tabgha, on the northwest shore of the Sea of Galilee in Israel. The modern church rests on the site of two earlier churches.
The earliest recording of a church commemorating Jesus' feeding of the 5,000 is by the Spanish pilgrim Egeria circa 380. "Not far away from there (Capernaum) are some stone steps where the Lord stood. And in the same place by the sea is a grassy field with plenty of hay and many palm trees. By them are seven springs, each flowing strongly. And this is the field where the Lord fed the people with the five loaves and two fishes. In fact the stone on which the Lord placed the bread has now been made into an altar. Past the walls of this church goes the public highway on which the Apostle Matthew had his place of custom. Near there on a mountain is a cave to which the Saviour climbed and spoke the Beatitudes."
The church was significantly enlarged around the year 480 with floor mosaics also added at this time. These renovations are attributed to the patriarch Matryrios. In 614 Persians destroyed the original Byzantine church, and the exact site of the shrine was lost for some 1,300 years. In 1888 the site was acquired by the German Catholic Society (Deutsche Katholische Palaestinamission) which was associated with the Archdiocese of Cologne. An initial archaeological survey was conducted in 1892, with full excavations beginning in 1932. These excavations resulted in the discovery of mosaic floors from the 5th-century church, which was also found to be built on the foundations of a much smaller 4th-century chapel. The current church was built to the same floor plan as the 5th-century Byzantine church. Since 1939 it has been administered by the Benedictine order as a daughter-house of the Dormition Abbey in Jerusalem.
Duel New ML 2012
Entre le Fujifilm X-Pro1 (2012) et le Pentax K-01 (2012)
Fujifilm X-Pro1 (2012)
Capteur APS-C X-Trans CMOS de 16.3 MP (4896 x 3264)
Le premier Fujifilm X à objectif interchangeable
Avec visée hybride OVF / EVF
Prix : $1699.95 US
Photos prise avec le Fujifilm XF 35mm F2 R WR
(facteur de multiplication de 1.5)
200-6400 L (100) - H (25600) ISO
___________________
Pentax K-01 (2012)
Capteur APS-C CMOS de 16.3 MP (4928x3264)
Première et dernière tentative de Pentax pour un ML APS-C
Un K-01 dépourvu de viseur
Prix: $600.00 US
Photos prise avec le SMC Pentax-DA 40mm f/2.8 XS
(facteur de multiplication de 1.5)
100-12800 ISO
* Les comparaisons sont effectuées avec un écran Studio Display 27 pouces Retina 5K (5120 x 2880) pixel 1/1
====================================================
Between the Fujifilm X-Pro1 (2012) and the Pentax K-01 (2012)
Fujifilm X-Pro1 (2012)
16.3 MP APS-C X-Trans CMOS sensor (4896 x 3264)
The first Fujifilm X interchangeable lens camera
With hybrid OVF/EVF viewfinder
Price: $1,699.95 US
Photos taken with the Fujifilm XF 35mm F2 R WR
(multiplication factor of 1.5)
200-6400 L (100) - H (25600) ISO
___________________
Pentax K-01 (2012)
16.3 MP APS-C CMOS sensor (4928x3264)
Pentax's first and last attempt at an APS-C ML camera
A K-01 without Viewfinder
Price: $600.00 US
Photos taken with the SMC Pentax-DA 40mm f/2.8 XS
(1.5x magnification)
ISO 100-12800
* Comparisons are made with a 27-inch Studio Display Retina 5K (5120 x 2880) pixel 1/1
A vous de juger / Your turn to judge
www.flickr.com/photos/maoby/albums/72177720329440860/
Vos remarques sont les bienvenues / Your remarks are welcome
The Church of the Multiplication of the Loaves and Fish is a Roman Catholic church located in Tabgha, on the northwest shore of the Sea of Galilee in Israel. The modern church rests on the site of two earlier churches.
The earliest recording of a church commemorating Jesus' feeding of the 5,000 is by the Spanish pilgrim Egeria circa 380. "Not far away from there (Capernaum) are some stone steps where the Lord stood. And in the same place by the sea is a grassy field with plenty of hay and many palm trees. By them are seven springs, each flowing strongly. And this is the field where the Lord fed the people with the five loaves and two fishes. In fact the stone on which the Lord placed the bread has now been made into an altar. Past the walls of this church goes the public highway on which the Apostle Matthew had his place of custom. Near there on a mountain is a cave to which the Saviour climbed and spoke the Beatitudes."
The church was significantly enlarged around the year 480 with floor mosaics also added at this time. These renovations are attributed to the patriarch Matryrios. In 614 Persians destroyed the original Byzantine church, and the exact site of the shrine was lost for some 1,300 years. In 1888 the site was acquired by the German Catholic Society (Deutsche Katholische Palaestinamission) which was associated with the Archdiocese of Cologne. An initial archaeological survey was conducted in 1892, with full excavations beginning in 1932. These excavations resulted in the discovery of mosaic floors from the 5th-century church, which was also found to be built on the foundations of a much smaller 4th-century chapel. The current church was built to the same floor plan as the 5th-century Byzantine church. Since 1939 it has been administered by the Benedictine order as a daughter-house of the Dormition Abbey in Jerusalem.
Quackup vs Math is an educational video game that I created for a class at the University of La Verne. Its an adventure game where you have to do timed math problems (in either addition, subtraction, multiplication, or division) as quickly as you can in an allotted time.
It has been tested by many children (in Elementary and Middle Schools in Templeton and Atascadero) and they really like it! I also used it a lot when I worked in a math intervention lab to help the students with their multiplication facts.
In the future I hope to have a version available for PDAs and Smart phones.
You can download the latest June 2010 Windows Version here: www.sendspace.com/file/dfy6qh.
Please let me know if you find any bugs, so I can fix them. :)
one of my Chicago pictures and a bit of a mindbender. It is a picture of the Cloud Gate's omphalos.
If you wish to use this photo, please see attribution, and commenting recommendations at www.flickr.com/people/opusbloo.
Original tubes used for experiments like detection of X-ray or gamma radiation from stars, in scientific satellites.
A tube like this can detect a single photon in the chamber on the left. The resulting electron is muliplied several times in the so called cascade (in focus).
Narrow DOF assingment of my photo course.
Quackup vs Math is an educational video game that I created for a class at the University of La Verne. Its an adventure game where you have to do timed math problems (in either addition, subtraction, multiplication, or division) as quickly as you can in an allotted time.
It has been tested by many children (in Elementary and Middle Schools in Templeton and Atascadero) and they really like it! I also used it a lot when I worked in a math intervention lab to help the students with their multiplication facts.
In the future I hope to have a version available for PDAs and Smart phones.
You can download the latest June 2010 Windows Version here: www.sendspace.com/file/dfy6qh.
Please let me know if you find any bugs, so I can fix them. :)
The Church of the Multiplication of the Loaves and Fish is a Roman Catholic church located in Tabgha, on the northwest shore of the Sea of Galilee in Israel. The modern church rests on the site of two earlier churches.
The earliest recording of a church commemorating Jesus' feeding of the 5,000 is by the Spanish pilgrim Egeria circa 380. "Not far away from there (Capernaum) are some stone steps where the Lord stood. And in the same place by the sea is a grassy field with plenty of hay and many palm trees. By them are seven springs, each flowing strongly. And this is the field where the Lord fed the people with the five loaves and two fishes. In fact the stone on which the Lord placed the bread has now been made into an altar. Past the walls of this church goes the public highway on which the Apostle Matthew had his place of custom. Near there on a mountain is a cave to which the Saviour climbed and spoke the Beatitudes."
The church was significantly enlarged around the year 480 with floor mosaics also added at this time. These renovations are attributed to the patriarch Matryrios. In 614 Persians destroyed the original Byzantine church, and the exact site of the shrine was lost for some 1,300 years. In 1888 the site was acquired by the German Catholic Society (Deutsche Katholische Palaestinamission) which was associated with the Archdiocese of Cologne. An initial archaeological survey was conducted in 1892, with full excavations beginning in 1932. These excavations resulted in the discovery of mosaic floors from the 5th-century church, which was also found to be built on the foundations of a much smaller 4th-century chapel. The current church was built to the same floor plan as the 5th-century Byzantine church. Since 1939 it has been administered by the Benedictine order as a daughter-house of the Dormition Abbey in Jerusalem.
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22 FEBRERO 2019
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Foto: @antonio_galvis
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I couldn't have thought of a better thing to add to my shop in Etsy because of my passion for numbers.
I am not that good at mathematics yet for a number of years now (LOL) I have seen (some are like visions or an insight) alignments that give me images ( 1 image seen had many similarities to the WW chart) and even encouraged me to research because this insight, and I have attributed this to dreams.
Medical studies are giving exposure to people and to know the root causes of different diseases.
www.marstranslation.com/blog/how-the-abnormal-multiplicat...
Back in Italy for less than two weeks, and of course I promptly got sick right after getting off the plane. On top of that, it's been raining for two days straight. So I'm starting to get a little cabin fever-ish.
But life + lemons = lemonade, no? So, here's a cool shot of the building outside my bedroom reflected multiple times (and upside-down) in rain droplets. Maybe one of the few ways to redeem that horrible Italian 70s architecture?
Oh, yeah. Better large.
Valentine Multiplication for 2nd & 3rd Grades (22 Worksheets & a Game!) is a 32 pg download offering worksheets to help students show understanding of multiplication as well as giving them plenty of practice! Your students will also love playing a Valentine's theme multiplication facts game. If you use math centers, this download will work well! Download @ www.christianhomeschoolhub.spruz.com/holiday-and-seasonal... (under Valentine's Day)
Supersampler + Fuji Reala 100.
Taken with my lovely, if somewhat idiosyncratic Supersampler - 4 lenses take 4 shots onto 1 negative over 2 seconds. Completely plastic, no control whatsoever and no viewfinder - you just wave it about and hope for the best - these days, I've even learned to point it at things and keep it still! ;)
The Church of the Multiplication of the Loaves and Fish is a Roman Catholic church located in Tabgha, on the northwest shore of the Sea of Galilee in Israel. The modern church rests on the site of two earlier churches.
The earliest recording of a church commemorating Jesus' feeding of the 5,000 is by the Spanish pilgrim Egeria circa 380. "Not far away from there (Capernaum) are some stone steps where the Lord stood. And in the same place by the sea is a grassy field with plenty of hay and many palm trees. By them are seven springs, each flowing strongly. And this is the field where the Lord fed the people with the five loaves and two fishes. In fact the stone on which the Lord placed the bread has now been made into an altar. Past the walls of this church goes the public highway on which the Apostle Matthew had his place of custom. Near there on a mountain is a cave to which the Saviour climbed and spoke the Beatitudes."
The church was significantly enlarged around the year 480 with floor mosaics also added at this time. These renovations are attributed to the patriarch Matryrios. In 614 Persians destroyed the original Byzantine church, and the exact site of the shrine was lost for some 1,300 years. In 1888 the site was acquired by the German Catholic Society (Deutsche Katholische Palaestinamission) which was associated with the Archdiocese of Cologne. An initial archaeological survey was conducted in 1892, with full excavations beginning in 1932. These excavations resulted in the discovery of mosaic floors from the 5th-century church, which was also found to be built on the foundations of a much smaller 4th-century chapel. The current church was built to the same floor plan as the 5th-century Byzantine church. Since 1939 it has been administered by the Benedictine order as a daughter-house of the Dormition Abbey in Jerusalem.
In Timaeus 35b-c Plato drives philosophical conclusions from a column of seven numbers that he displayed in the following order :
1, 2 ,3, 4, 9, 8 ,27
He even explains that these numbers were devided to two stripes and laid one on top of the other in the form of a cross. However, in later generations, they used to display these numbers in the shape of the Greek letter lambda, in two lines, and that's why this view is called Plato's Lambda . Each stripe had four places, so that one stripe is holding the powers of two : 1 , 2, 4, 8 , and the second stripe is holding the powers of three : 1 , 3, 9, 27.
In the first stripe 1 was considered equal to a point, which can not be measured , two was considered equal to a line , which is the first dimension, 4 was considered equal to an area , which is the second dimension, and eight was considered equal to a volume, which is the third and final dimension . Eight is the first cubic number. In the second stripe 1 was considered equal to a point , 3 to an angle (?) , 9 to an area and 27 to a volume , while 27 is the first odd cubic number.
there were mathematicians who attributed special meaning to the fact that the amount of the two stripes, 55 , is the content of 10:
1+2+4+8=15
1+3+9+27=40
1+2+3+4+5+6+7+8+9+10=55=15+40
Quackup vs Math is an educational video game that I created for a class at the University of La Verne. Its an adventure game where you have to do timed math problems (in either addition, subtraction, multiplication, or division) as quickly as you can in an allotted time.
It has been tested by many children (in Elementary and Middle Schools in Templeton and Atascadero) and they really like it! I also used it a lot when I worked in a math intervention lab to help the students with their multiplication facts.
In the future I hope to have a version available for PDAs and Smart phones.
You can download the latest June 2010 Windows Version here: www.sendspace.com/file/dfy6qh.
Please let me know if you find any bugs, so I can fix them. :)
A church of the Feeding of the Five Thousand was first built on this site in c.350. The church was small (15.5m x 9.5m) and on a slightly different orientation than the later versions. The Spanish pilgrim Egeria visited this church in the 380s, and reported:
By the sea is a grassy field with plenty of hay and many palm trees. By them are seven springs (heptapegon), each flowing strongly. And this is the field where the Lord fed the people with the five loaves and two fishes. In fact the stone on which the Lord placed the bread has now been made into an altar. People who go there take away small pieces of the stone to bring them prosperity, and they are very effective. (trans. J. Wilkinson)
The church was significantly enlarged around 480 — an inscription attributes its building to the patriarch Matryrios (478-86) — which included the addition of the splendid floor mosaic. The mosaics were repaired in the 6th century and the church was destroyed around 685 AD.
The site was bought by the Deutsche Verien vom Heilige Lande and excavated in 1932; a protective cover was built over the mosaics in 1936. In 1982 this was replaced by the modern Church of the Multiplication of the Loaves and Fishes that stands today, which is a faithful reconstruction of the original.
The Church of the Multiplication of the Loaves and Fish is a Roman Catholic church located in Tabgha, on the northwest shore of the Sea of Galilee in Israel. The modern church rests on the site of two earlier churches.
The earliest recording of a church commemorating Jesus' feeding of the 5,000 is by the Spanish pilgrim Egeria circa 380. "Not far away from there (Capernaum) are some stone steps where the Lord stood. And in the same place by the sea is a grassy field with plenty of hay and many palm trees. By them are seven springs, each flowing strongly. And this is the field where the Lord fed the people with the five loaves and two fishes. In fact the stone on which the Lord placed the bread has now been made into an altar. Past the walls of this church goes the public highway on which the Apostle Matthew had his place of custom. Near there on a mountain is a cave to which the Saviour climbed and spoke the Beatitudes."
The church was significantly enlarged around the year 480 with floor mosaics also added at this time. These renovations are attributed to the patriarch Matryrios. In 614 Persians destroyed the original Byzantine church, and the exact site of the shrine was lost for some 1,300 years. In 1888 the site was acquired by the German Catholic Society (Deutsche Katholische Palaestinamission) which was associated with the Archdiocese of Cologne. An initial archaeological survey was conducted in 1892, with full excavations beginning in 1932. These excavations resulted in the discovery of mosaic floors from the 5th-century church, which was also found to be built on the foundations of a much smaller 4th-century chapel. The current church was built to the same floor plan as the 5th-century Byzantine church. Since 1939 it has been administered by the Benedictine order as a daughter-house of the Dormition Abbey in Jerusalem.
Another angle in the park near the Church of Multiplication, in Tabgha, on the shore of Sea of Galilee, Israel. In the forefront, a Poinciana tree.
Tabgha (Arabic: الطابغة, al-Tabigha; Hebrew: עין שבע, Ein Sheva which means "spring of seven") is an area situated on the north-western shore of the Sea of Galilee in Israel. It is traditionally accepted as the place of the miracle of the multiplication of the loaves and fishes (Mark 6:30–46) and the fourth resurrection appearance of Jesus (John 21:1–24) after his Crucifixion. Between the Late Muslim period and 1948, it was the site of a Palestinian Arab village. source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tabgha
Of the two OFSP varieties, Olympia is more prolific in terms of vine multiplication and is also highly preferred by farmers due its root yield and taste. Photo credit: Jonathan Odhong’/ IITA
The first of a series of photos shot on assignment for Theatre West on Cahuenga, LA's oldest operating theater!
Visit them at theatrewest.org/
Los Angeles, CA