No, I can't. That conclusion would be completely unwarranted, unsupported
as it is by any available facts. We don't know anything about either line, not
even whether they are on the same planet. Do you have a drawing or something
that might give us some information about them ?
Answer:

Step-by-step explanation:



Answer:
t > 82
Step-by-step explanation:
First write what we know.
Earned $72
$4 per ticket, t
Cost is $400
So let's write our equation:
The cost is $400 so we put that on the left side,
$400 =
Now on the right side, we know they earned $72, so +$72 and each ticket (t) is $4 so $4t would represent the amount earned after they sell a certain number of tickets.
So we write:
$400 = $4t + $72 Now solve for t to find the number of tickets they need to sell.
400 = 4t + 72 Subtract 72 from each side.
400 - 72 = 4t + 72 - 72
328 = 4t Divide each side by 4.
328/4 = 4t/4
328/4 = t
82 = t
If the committee wants money left over they need to sell more than 82 tickets!
Our inequality is:
t > 82
Answer:
1:3 or 1/4 and 3/4
2:6
3:9
Step-by-step explanation:
Step-by-step explanation:
x. | y
1 | -4
2 | 0
3 | 4
Is this correct?