He has a nephew called Jacob Bennett.
The nephew on Melissa & Joey is named Ryder Scanlon. He is Mel's nephew and the younger brother of Lennox Scanlon. Ryder is played by actor Nick Robinson.
Penny was the niece Clipper was the nephew
Bow Wow is not Snoop Dogg's nephew. Snoop Dogg calls many of the younger artists, particularly the ones he discovers or promotes, "nephew", meaning something along the lines of "protégé". On a side note, Snoop Dogg actually *is* the nephew of Bootsie Collins.
His brother's son.
Soon the bishop would ordain his nephew as a priest.
Soon the bishop would ordain his nephew as a priest.
Milton surely a a 9 year nephew of a mathematician
I'm glad you asked me that. I know his great-nephew, Toby. The name is pronounced "Canes". It's the same Norman French family that settled in the village of Milton in Buckinghamshire in the 1200s, renaming it Milton Keynes but the town's name is nowadays usually pronounced "Milton Keens". Maynard was Lord Keynes's mother's surname.
The number first used by nine-year-old Milton Sirotta in 1940 is known as a "googol." A googol is represented as 10^100, a 1 followed by 100 zeros. This term was introduced by mathematician Edward Kasner, who asked his young nephew, Milton Sirotta, to come up with a name for such a large number.
Your nephew's nephew is the son of one of your nephew's brothers or sisters. He is your great nephew.
Your mother's (mom) nephew is your answer.
Your nephew's son is your grand nephew or great nephew.
Your nephew's son is your great nephew. Your niece's son is also your great nephew.
Your wife's nephew is your nephew and his son is your wife's, and your, great nephew.
The following is from Wikipedia:"The term was coined in 1938 by Milton Sirotta (1929-1980), nephew of American mathematician Edward Kasner, when he was nine years old."
The term was coined in 1938 by Milton Sirotta (1911-1981), nephew of Americanmathematician Edward Kasner, when he was nine years old. Kasner popularized the concept in his book Mathematics and the Imagination (1940).