Answer:
3
(
3
)
+
6
(
2
)
+
2
=
2
(
3
)
+
3
(
2
)
+
5
Step-by-step explanation:
Answer:
Step-by-step explanation:
Answer:
a) |n -11| = 5
b) n ∈ {6, 16}
Step-by-step explanation:
The wording of the question is ridiculous. We assume it is intended to read, "The distance between two numbers is 5. One of the numbers is 11. What are the possibilities for the other?"
a) The distance between a number (n) and 11 can be written as ...
|n -11|
Since we want that distance to be 5, we can write the equation ...
|n -11| = 5
__
b) The equation resolves to two:
Adding 11 to both sides of both equations gives ...
The two solutions are n=6 and n=16.
_____
<em>Comment on the question statement</em>
Increasingly, we see curriculum materials written in Pidgin English or where the words have a meaning different from that understood by a native English speaker. It appears you are the lucky recipient of such materials, so must do occasional "interpretation". Here, it seems that "two time a number" is intended to mean "two numbers."
Answer:
<h3>
9, 11, 13, 15</h3>
Step-by-step explanation:
{k - some integer}
2k+1 - the first odd integer (the least)
5(2k+1) - five times the least
5(2k+1)+3 -<u> three more than five times the least</u>
2k+1+2 = 2k+3 - the odd integer consecutive to 2k+1
2k+3+2 = 2k+5 - the next odd consecutive integer (third)
2k+5+2 = 2k+7 - the last odd consecutive integer (fourth)
2k+1+2k+3+2k+5+2k+7 - <u>the sum of four odd consecutive integers</u>
2k+1 + 2k+3 + 2k+5 + 2k+7 = 5(2k+1) + 3
8k + 16 = 10k + 5 + 3
- 10k -10k
-2k + 16 = 8
-16 - 16
-2k = -8
÷(-2) ÷(-2)
k = 4
2k+1 = 2•4+1 = 9
2k+3 = 2•4+3 = 11
2k+5 = 2•4+5 = 13
2k+7 = 2•4+7 = 15
Check: 9+11+13+15 = 48; 48-3 = 45; 45:5 = 9 = 2k+1
The system of inequalities for the specific graph is
1. (one on top) y ≤ 1/2x + 6
2. (one on bottom) y > 1/2x -2
Hope this helped! :D