This question is actually a lot simpler than it seems
for a quarter think about money - a quarter is 25 cents or 1/4 of a dollar - so 1 and a quarter yard in decimal form is equivalent to 1.25
now you need to find how many 1 and a quarter yards are in 3 yards - to do this you simply divide 3 by 1.25
3/1.25 = 2.4
so julie can cut 2.4 1 and a quarter long pieces from the string
if you have any questions about how i answered this question please let me know:)
GCF= 1
FACTORED VERSION = (X-1) (2X+3)(X+2)
Answer:
<u>Option 2</u>
(2,8), because the graph of the two equations intersects at this point
Step-by-step explanation:
Just looking at the graph, you can tell that the point (2,8) is where the two lines intersect.
Hope this helped! :)
Answer:
16w^2 - 24w + 9
Step-by-step explanation:
To simplify this, you would use the special product (a - b)^2 = a^2 - 2ab + b^2. We can correlate this with the given term so that,
a = 4w
and
b = 3
Now we just substitute into a^2 - 2ab + b^2
(4w)^2 - 2(4w)(3) + (3)^2
16w^2 - 24w + 9