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Grade 8 Mathematics Quiz on Chen Jingrun, created by E Mister on 06/02/2021.

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Chen Jingrun

Question 1 of 3

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Chen Jingrun (( May 22, 1933, March 19, 1934, May 28, 1996, January 9, 1929, July 5, 1935, October 7, 1940, December 2, 1934 )( March 19, 1996, May 22, 1996, February 27, 1998, September 10, 2003, November 30, 1999, April 11, 1996, June 4, 2020 )) was a ( Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Canadian, American, Mexican, Norweigan ) ( mathematician, accountant, math teacher, engineer, university professor, philosopher, wizard ) who made significant contributions to ( number theory, calculus, geometry, recreational methematics, computer programming, algebra, theoretical physics ).

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Question 2 of 3

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His work on the ( twin prime conjecture, triplet prime conjecture, twin semiprime conjecture, triplet semiprime conjecture, twin integer conjecture, triplet integer conjecture, double prime problem ), ( Waring's problem, Villefort's problem, Familienbaum's problem, Morrel's problem, Medstor's problem, Brahmagupta's problem, Leibnitz's problem ), ( Goldbach's conjecture, Goldberg's congecture, Goldsmith's conjecture, Goldman's conjecture, Goldson's conjecture, Golder's conjecture, Golding's conjecture ) and ( Legendre's conjecture, Morcerf's conjecture, Noirtier's conjecture, Bertuccio's conjecture, Danglars' conjecture, Faria's conjecture, Hatcher's conjecture ) led to progress in ( analytic, basic, thoeretical, simple, extended, all, algebraic ) number theory.

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Question 3 of 3

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In a ( 1966, 1967, 1968, unique, 1965, 1964, well-known ) ( paper, article, letter, experiment, interview, pubication, class ) he ( proved, disproved, discovered, observed, invented, documented, created ) what is now called ( Chen's theorem, Jingrun's theorem, the prime/semiprime theorem, the sum theorem, Euclid's theorem, the 4th law of motion, Conway's theorem ): every ( sufficiently large even number, sufficiently small even number, sufficiently large odd number, sufficiently small odd number, sufficeintly large number, sufficiently small number, number greater than 0 ) can be written as the ( sum, quotient, difference, product, mean, sine, intergral ) of ( a prime, an integer, an even number, an odd number, a real number, a semiprime, 0 ) and ( a semiprime, a prime, an integer, an odd number, an even number, 0, a real number ) (the ( product, sum, difference, quotient, mean, median, mode ) of ( two, three, four, five, a finite number of, an infinite number of ) primes) – e.g., 100 = 23 + 7*11.

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