I am assuming that you can only pick one answer per question.
Let's imagine there are two questions on the test. I would:
1) Consider the first question. How many possible ways could you answer it?
2) Consider the second question. How many ways can you answer that?
If you wrote out all the possibilities, how many combinations of answers would you get across the two questions?
Answer:
4√10
Step-by-step explanation:
Hello!
Let's first simplify the radical.
We can do this by expanding the radical:
We need to pull out a perfect square factor to expand a radical and simplify it. In 45, we have 9 and 5 multiplied, and 9 is a perfect square.
Let's work with √45:
- √45 can be written as √9 * √5 (using the rule √ab = √a * √b)
- √9 simplifies to 3, so it is 3√5
Now we can simplify the operation in the parenthesis by combining like terms:
- 3√5 + √5
- √5 + √5 + √5 + √5
- 4√5
Now using the same rule as above, we can multiply the values:
Your solution is 4√10
Answer:
A relation is a relationship between sets of values. In math, the relation is between the x-values and y-values of ordered pairs. The set of all x-values is called the domain, and the set of all y-values is called the range. ... The range consists of the y-values from each ordered pair.
Answer:
b
Step-by-step explanation:
because there only allowing the first 50 to register that would be a contest
A fraction is a short way of writing a division, and when you
actually perform the division, you get the decimal.
Either of them can be written as the other one.