Answer:
yes
Step-by-step explanation:
you must first see what spinners says then you follow what spinners says
Answer:
the answer is s=5/4 minus 1/16
hope this helps :D
Please write x^2, not x2.
If you stretch the graph of y=x^2 vertically by a factor of 4, the resulting graph represents the quadratic function y = 4x^2. It's still a parabola, but appears to be thinner.
This particular question is about horizontal stretching, however. Stretching the graph horizontally by a factor of 4 results in the new function g(x) = (x/4)^2. Try graphing x^2 and also (x/4)^2 on the same set of axes to observe this phenomenon.
The answer is A. It is .015 between .19137 and .17637 and also between .17637 and .16137.
Hope that helps
Answer:
Step-by-step explanation:
EH=w
then it is as simple as pluggin in
gh=4(eh)-51