Answer:
18 girls are in the group so 18:16
I think it might be rite but not to to sure
I'll start 18 and 22 for you, and you should then be able to do the rest on your own!
For 18, what we literally do is apply the distance formula for all the points and add them up. For B to C, we get the distance between them to be
sqrt((x1-x2)^2+(y1-y2)^2)=sqrt((0-4)^2+(3-(-1))^2)=sqrt((-4)^2+4^2)=sqrt(16+16)=sqrt(32). Repeat the process for C to E, E and F, and F to B then add the results up to get your answer!
For 22, since the area of a rectangle is length*width (we know given the right angles and that the opposite sides are equal in how long they are), we can multiply 2 perpendicular lines, for example, BC and CE to get sqrt(32)*sqrt(8)=16 as the area
Answer:
First angle: 60°
Second angle: 30°
Step-by-step explanation:
Let the two angles be signified by the variables x & y.
Let the first angle = x, and the second angle = y.
It is given that:
"The measure[ments] of the complementary angles...": x + y = 90°
"The measure of the first angle is 30 greater than the measure of the second angle": x = y + 30°
Use the system of equations. Plug in y + 30 for x in the first equation:
(y + 30) + y = 90
Combine like terms:
(y + y) + 30 = 90
2y + 30 = 90
Isolate the variable, y. Note the equal sign, what you do to one side, you do to the other. Do the opposite of PEMDAS. First, subtract 30 from both sides of the equation:
2y + 30 (-30) = 90 (-30)
2y = 90 - 30
2y = 60
Next, divide 2 from both sides of the equation:
(2y)/2 = (60)/2
y = 60/2
y = 30°
Plug in 30 for y in one of the equations:
x = y + 30
x = (30) + 30
x = 60°
Your answers:
First angle: 60°
Second angle: 30°
The only true inequality is <u>-3 1/2 > -4.5</u>