A counterexample proves something wrong. To disprove "When it rains, it pours," you could give an example of a time when it rains and does not pour. What if it only rains a little? What if it rains frogs? How are you supposed to "pour" frogs? I dunno. This is sort of an open-ended question. I'd go with "It drizzles, but does not pour."
Answer: 110 square inches.
Step-by-step explanation:
The volume of a rectangular box would be:

In this case, we know the volume, the length and the height, and we don't know the width, so we're going to isolate it:

Substituting the data:

This width is also the width of the top of the box, so the area of the top would be:

X+20 because x= origanal amount +20 more
Answer: 135 nickels
Step-by-step explanation:
135 Nickels is $6.75 and 165 dimes is $16.50
That's 300 coins. $6.75 + $16.50 = $23.25
2 inches = 50 miles
1 inch = 25miles
0.5 inches = 12.5 miles
0.25 inches = 6.25
you need 1.25 so you do 25+ 6.25 and get 31.25. To the nearest mile this would be 31 miles.