Well, 15% of 60 is 9 so now you have to create a model :)
Answer:
1. About 9 left. 2. £21 left
Step-by-step explanation:
First, you do 65 ÷ 3 = 21.7 if rounding to the tenths, 21.67 if to the hundredths, and so on. Then you do 21.67 - 12 = 9.67. But since it is cards, I would say about 9 left.
First you add the £20 to the £70 to get £90. then you multiply 7×3 to get £21 spent on books. After that, multiply 12×4 to get £48 spent on games. then do 48 + 21 = 69. 90-69= 21.
Here is the equation....
(70+20)-[(7×3)+(12×4)] = £21
So you always want to pull out the gcf first but since there isn't one, we can move on.
so we can make an acb chart which is multiplying the a value and the c value and find factors that of that product that will equal the b value.
a value is 2
c value is -15
b value is 7
-30 factors to equal 7 = 10, -3
10 - 3 = 7
so the factors 10 and -3 work.
so now you make 2 separate parenthesis with one of the factors and one x. and it should be set equal to 0.
(x+10)(x-3) = 0
now solve for x in each separate parenthesis.
x = -10
x = 3
those r the roots
hope this helps
Answer:
Step-by-step explanation:
Choose a random fraction less than 1. I will choose 1/4.
1/6 ÷ 1/4 = 1/6 × 4/1 = 4/6 = 2/3
2/3 > 1/6 so this example supports his claim.
Now chose a fraction greater than 1. I will choose 4/3
1/6 ÷ 4/3 = 1/6 * 3/4 = 3/24
3/24 < 1/6 so this contradicts his claim