Answer:
Is only if a Biconditional?
The general form (for goats, geometry or lunch) is: Hypothesis if and only if conclusion. Because the statement is biconditional (conditional in both directions), we can also write it this way, which is the converse statement: Conclusion if and only if hypothesis.
Step-by-step explanation:
The idea for transitions for an equation like this is

where m = slope
h = how much left or right (note the negative)
k = how much up or down
moving 13 down would mean
k = -13
so

D. would be your answer
Th term of an arithmetic sequence:
We have to find the difference (d)
an=a₁+(n-1)d
Data:
a₁=-7
a₁₈=95
95=-7+(18-1)d
95+7=17d
17d=102
d=102/17
d=6
Now, we can calculate the 35 th term of an arithmetic sequence:
a₃₅=-7+(35-1)*6
a₃₅=-7+34*6
a₃₅=-7+204
a₃₅=197
Answer: the 35th term of this arithmetic sequence is 197. (a₃₅=197)
Idk i literally get one away for everything i do
Answer:
5/14
Step-by-step explanation:
4/7 x 5/8 = 20 /56
Then divide by 4
20/56 x 4/4 = 5 /14