Dot plots are used for continuous, quantitative, univariate data. They can be also used for finding outliers, compare distributions, locate the central tendency of your data, etc…
He spent half an hour - 30 minutes - on his report
3/6 . . . . .
<em>Yes.</em> 2 of anything is less than 3 of the same thing ... like sixths.
2/8 . . . . .
No. When changed to common denominator, the inequality
would say
8/24 < 6/24
and that's not true.
2/4 . . . . .
<em>Yes.</em> When changed to common denominator,
the inequality would say
4/12 < 6/12
and that's true.
2/3 . . . . .
<em>Yes.</em> When changed to common denominator,
the inequality would say
2/6 < 4/6
and that's true.
1/6 . . . . .
No. 2 of anything is more than 1 of the same thing ... like sixths.
Answer:
Option D, 17
Step-by-step explanation:
<u>Step 1: Set x to 3
</u>
Answer: Option D, 17