60 hundreds means 6000 = 6 thousands;
So, 10 · x = 6000;
x = 600;
600 means 6 hundreds;
Finally, 10 times as many as 6 hundreds is 60 hundreds or 6 thousands.
Answer:
<h2>1 < x < 6 ⇒ x ∈ (1, 6)</h2>
Step-by-step explanation:
3x - 8 > -5 <em>add 8 to both sides</em>
3x > 3 <em>divide both sides by 3</em>
x > 1
2x - 7 < 5 <em>add 7 to both sides</em>
2x < 12 <em>divide both sides by 2</em>
x < 6
From x > 1 and x < 6 we have the solution 1 < x < 6 ⇒ x ∈ (1, 6)
Answer is (a)
its a binomial
not a monomial
If there were 30 Girls, 4 Girls played for each part.
X = 47 + 9y
xy = 1860
y(47 + 9y) = 1860
47y + 9y² = 1860
9y² + 47y - 1860 = 0
> using a quadratic equation solver on a calculator but you can also use the quadratic equation = [-b+/- √(b²-4ac)]/(2a)
> only integer solution is x = 12
12y = 1860
y = 155
integers are 12 and 155