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I saw it cut on 4.0
but anyway. pasting this here for those "you can just plug any number in people"
the Pi shortcut works only on word 13 and office 365 btw.
You’ll likely also recall Pi (π), the number expressed most often as 3.14, the first three digits of at least 2.7 trillion digits, which make up the entire number. If you have forgotten Pi, it is commonly used to find the area and circumference of a circle. There is a mathematician’s shorthand for finding Pi, and it is diving the number 22, by the number 7. Paying homage to this, if you have a PC, and you type alt+227, it will generate the symbol π in your word processing program. Notice how 227 are the same digits that are used in the equation 22 divided by 7. If we write out the phrase twenty-two divided by seven, it will sum to 314, much like 3.14, using Ordinal Gematria. The math follows:
Twenty = 20+23+5+14+20+25 = 107 Two = 20+23+15 = 58
Divided = 4+9+22+9+4+5+4 = 57
by = 2+25 = 27
Seven = 19+5+22+5+14 = 65
Twenty-two divided by seven = 314 (Ordinal) (Same digits as 3.14)
Equally as interesting, if we write out three-hundred-sixty, the number of degrees in a circle, and calculate using Ordinal Gematria, it will sum to 227. Again, Pi is most commonly used to unlock the mathematics of the circle. The math is as follows:
Three = 20+8+18+5+5 = 56
Hundred = 8+21+14+4+18+5+4 = 74 Sixty = 19+9+24+20+25 = 97 Three-hundred-sixty = 227 (Ordinal)
but anyway. pasting this here for those "you can just plug any number in people"
the Pi shortcut works only on word 13 and office 365 btw.
You’ll likely also recall Pi (π), the number expressed most often as 3.14, the first three digits of at least 2.7 trillion digits, which make up the entire number. If you have forgotten Pi, it is commonly used to find the area and circumference of a circle. There is a mathematician’s shorthand for finding Pi, and it is diving the number 22, by the number 7. Paying homage to this, if you have a PC, and you type alt+227, it will generate the symbol π in your word processing program. Notice how 227 are the same digits that are used in the equation 22 divided by 7. If we write out the phrase twenty-two divided by seven, it will sum to 314, much like 3.14, using Ordinal Gematria. The math follows:
Twenty = 20+23+5+14+20+25 = 107 Two = 20+23+15 = 58
Divided = 4+9+22+9+4+5+4 = 57
by = 2+25 = 27
Seven = 19+5+22+5+14 = 65
Twenty-two divided by seven = 314 (Ordinal) (Same digits as 3.14)
Equally as interesting, if we write out three-hundred-sixty, the number of degrees in a circle, and calculate using Ordinal Gematria, it will sum to 227. Again, Pi is most commonly used to unlock the mathematics of the circle. The math is as follows:
Three = 20+8+18+5+5 = 56
Hundred = 8+21+14+4+18+5+4 = 74 Sixty = 19+9+24+20+25 = 97 Three-hundred-sixty = 227 (Ordinal)