1+1=3
One plus One can equal Three without protection.
Who says math doesn't apply to real life?
1+1=3
Reproduction joke. The "1+1" refers to two people having sex; the extra 1 represents a potential baby, making a total of 3 people.
"I'm gonna get laid tonight!"
"Whatever man, just remember sometimes 1+1=3."
"Whatever man, just remember sometimes 1+1=3."
1+1=3
Pregnant.
Like one guy and one girl=one guy and one girl and one baby.
Like one guy and one girl=one guy and one girl and one baby.
So, what happened last night?
Well: 1+1=3.
Well: 1+1=3.
2+1+1=3
A disorder of the mind that comes from drinking Pepsi in the wee hours of the morn, which normally results in:
Burping through your nose
Laughing repeatedly for 15 minutes straight
Making strange sound effects
Licking phones and frog Beanie Babies when Orlando Bloom is sighted on the TV Guide Channel.
Burping through your nose
Laughing repeatedly for 15 minutes straight
Making strange sound effects
Licking phones and frog Beanie Babies when Orlando Bloom is sighted on the TV Guide Channel.
Lennon and I had a 2+1+1=3 this morning that lasted for an hour or more.
2+1+1=3
A demented way of interacting, insanity, sleep deprived, usually witnessed while coming home from Forensics tournaments. Must have two people in order to accomplish this state, and they will usually be of opposite genders.
I saw Eileen and Brandon having 2+1+1=3 today.
1/3 hippie, 1/3 punk, 1/3 republican
It's a new-fresh way of thinking. Socially liberal, socially pissed-off, and fiscally conservative. F*ck off, but I love you, and I want government out of our lives as much as possible.
I'm the New Republican. That's how I doos it, in three parts; 1/3 hippie, 1/3 punk, 1/3 republican.
1 + 2 + 3 = 1 × 2 × 3
The nontrivial solution to the equation a + b + c = a × b × c, where a, b, and c are positive integers—the sum and the product of three whole numbers are the same.
Besides 1 + 2 + 3 = 1 × 2 × 3, the numbers 1, 2, and 3 form the set of three integers such that each divides the sum of the other two, and their reciprocals show that the number 1 can be expressed as the sum of three unit fractions: 1 = 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/6.