Total money Marcus has = $28
Money spent to buy a notebook = $3.75
Money left now = 
Money needed to be saved = $11.25
So, the amount of money Marcus can spend = 
Cost of a packet of chips = $1.30
The inequality to determine the maximum number of chips he can buy is:
Let the number of chips Marcus can buy = x
As he cannot spend more than $13 to buy chips so equation becomes:

Solving this we get

Hence, Marcus can buy a maximum of 10 packs of chips and save $11.25
Jar 1 : 16 red, 4 blue....total = 20
P(blue) = 4/20 reduces to 1/5
jar 2 : 75 white,25 blue...total = 100
P(blue) = 25/100 reduces to 1/4
P(blue,blue) = 1/5 * 1/4 = 1/20 or 0.05 or 5%
Answer:
that looks hard?
Step-by-step explanation:
Answer:
15
Step-by-step explanation:
Simply subtract the smaller number from the bigger number, and divide by 2. Or add the two numbers together and divide by 2.
Answer:
Q
Step-by-step explanation:
The nearest perfect square of sqrt10 is sqrt9 and sqrt 16, representing a 3 and 4.
Thus, we can conclude that sqrt10 is between 3 and 4.
Notice sqrt 10 is very close with sqrt9 than sqrt16, it should be closer to 3 rather than 4.
The only point that fits the context is Q