Mathematicians can be categorized as a noun.
Noun |
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mathematician - a person skilled in mathematics |
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1. | noun | I don't like it when mathematicians who know much more than I do can't express themselves explicitly. | |
2. | noun | Mathematicians are poets, except that they have to prove what their fantasy creates. | |
3. | noun | Mathematicians are like French people: whatever you tell them they translate it into their own language and turn it into something totally different. | |
4. | noun | Mathematicians have this in common with the French: whatever you're trying to say to them, they take it and translate it in their own way and turn it around into something completely different. | |
5. | noun | Angry at Leif Ericson for stealing his thunder 500 years before, Christopher Columbus once wrote a rigorous mathematical proof that showed how Ericson had never actually been to North America. Unfortunately, the proof was too difficult for even the brightest mathematicians to understand. | |
6. | noun | Mathematicians are creative artists, their artworks being sophisticated constructs of ideas and aesthetic proofs. | |
7. | noun | Saeb thinks mathematicians are self-contained walking pieces of heaven. | |
8. | noun | I don't like it when mathematicians who know much more than I do can't express themselves clearly. | |
9. | noun | That which for mathematicians is illogical is entirely normal for musicians: seven plus seven is thirteen. | |
10. | noun | Some of you may not have heard of him before, but Georg Cantor was undoubtedly one of the greatest mathematicians of the twentieth century. | |
11. | noun | It's not for nothing that mathematicians use the phrase "necessary and sufficient." | |
12. | noun | Mathematicians are like some Frenchmen: whatever you say to them they translate into their own language, and forthwith it is something entirely different. | |
13. | noun | Mathematics is written for mathematicians. | |
14. | noun | We'll leave theory to the mathematicians. | |
15. | noun | Mathematicians love to prove things. |
Sentence | |
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noun | |
I don't like it when mathematicians who know much more than I do can't express themselves explicitly. | |
Mathematicians are poets, except that they have to prove what their fantasy creates. | |
Mathematicians are like French people: whatever you tell them they translate it into their own language and turn it into something totally different. | |
Mathematicians have this in common with the French: whatever you're trying to say to them, they take it and translate it in their own way and turn it around into something completely different. | |
Angry at Leif Ericson for stealing his thunder 500 years before, Christopher Columbus once wrote a rigorous mathematical proof that showed how Ericson had never actually been to North America. Unfortunately, the proof was too difficult for even the brightest mathematicians to understand. | |
Mathematicians are creative artists, their artworks being sophisticated constructs of ideas and aesthetic proofs. | |
Saeb thinks mathematicians are self-contained walking pieces of heaven. | |
I don't like it when mathematicians who know much more than I do can't express themselves clearly. | |
That which for mathematicians is illogical is entirely normal for musicians: seven plus seven is thirteen. | |
Some of you may not have heard of him before, but Georg Cantor was undoubtedly one of the greatest mathematicians of the twentieth century. | |
It's not for nothing that mathematicians use the phrase "necessary and sufficient." | |
Mathematicians are like some Frenchmen: whatever you say to them they translate into their own language, and forthwith it is something entirely different. | |
Mathematics is written for mathematicians. | |
We'll leave theory to the mathematicians. | |
Mathematicians love to prove things. |