The greek letter delta, as used in mathematics (and hence science, medicine and life in general), simply symbolizes the difference between any two numbers. The greek letter itself is indeed triangular in shape. It is roughly equivalent to our letter D.
Delta means change. If you find a definition of delta that doesn't include the word change in it, and only includes the word difference, you've encountered an incorrect definition.
Ive been doing the research and the SCIENCE says:
I just looked up delta and it said...airline blah blah blah nothing about change.
Omegatron was a transformer toy I think.
Covid is the flu.
The vaccine is like schrodinger's cat, it's either saline or poision.
Corona is a beer that needs lime.
In order to graduate medical school you need to twerk on tick tock.
Avoid hospitals and if you are really sick call joe rogaine.
Listening to fauchi makes me feel like puking.
I dont know who the WHO is but the CDC is on second and the NIH is on third.
Anal swabs are funny as hell and maskers are maroons.
Myocarditis is a social construct.
Ps. As of now Avoid Australia
I lol'd.
One correction: Schrodinger's vaccine wouldn't be either saline or poison, it would be both at once, at least until the wave function collapses.
I use the term delta in my line of work. Change is accurate and difference between is also accurate.
Yeah I misspoke and stand corrected, the difference between two unrelated numbers is not a delta, there must be a change in the value of something. However, the Merriam-Webster definition interestingly does not include the word change: -- it says it's defined as the "increment of a variable."
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