Round each number to the nearest 10.
33 rounds to 30 and 89 rounds to 90, thus in your head it's easier to mentally add 30 + 90 for purposes of estimation.
Answer:You have roughly the same chance of being called as anyone else living in the United States who has a telephone. This chance, however, is only about 1 in 154,000 for a typical Pew Research Center survey. To obtain that rough estimate, we divide the current adult population of the U.S. (about 235 million) by the typical sample size of our polls (usually around 1,500 people). Telephone numbers for Pew Research Center polls are generated through a process that attempts to give every household in the population a known chance of being included. Of course, if you don’t have a telephone at all (about 2% of households), then you have no chance of being included in our telephone surveys.
Step-by-step explanation:
It equals 5,800. Good Luck In School!
Answer: To add or subtract radicals, the indices and what is inside the radical (called the radicand) must be exactly the same. If the indices and radicands are the same, then add or subtract the terms in front of each like radical. If the indices or radicands are not the same, then you can not add or subtract the radicals.