Answer: Choice C)
(1/30)*(1/29)
Explanation:
Jack has a 1/30 chance of being picked since he is 1 person out of 30 total. After his name is picked, and not put back, there are 30-1 = 29 names left. The chances Jill is picked is 1/29. The two fractions are multiplied to get the overall probability both are picked.
1.-4
2.-6
3.2
4.-2
here you go.
Forty-five and twenty-three hundredths.
In general, with decimals, the first place value after the decimal is read as a tenth, the second is read as a hundredth, the third is read as a thousandth, and so on. In front of the decimal, we know that 4 is in the tens place and 5 is in the ones place, so we say forty-five. Past the decimal, 2 is in the tenths place (think about how 2/10 = .2, which is "two-tenths") and 3 is in the hundredths place (think about how 23/100 = .23). You read the number after the decimal like normal ("twenty-three," "two-hundred fifteen," etc), then you add the place ("tenths, hundredths, ten-thousands") at the very end.
Any

in this set will be real numbers that are both less than

and greater than

. But that's not possible, so this set is empty.
Answer:
B and A
Step-by-step explanation:
What I did for these problems is plug in the numbers listed for the x-value. For example, in your calculator you’d put; (1/2)^3 and that’d get you 1/8. Then, try it for 8^(2 - 3) which is also 1/8. So, (1/2)^3 = 8^(2 - 3).
The same process for the second problem. 16^(2(7/3) -3) = 4^((7/3) + 1). This should give you 101.59…
I hope this helps :)!