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erma4kov [3.2K]
4 years ago
5

Solve the equation. Then check your solution.

Mathematics
1 answer:
Ilya [14]4 years ago
3 0

Answer:

d. 7.3

Step-by-step explanation:

-16-10.2g = -14.7g + 16.85

4.5g = 32.85

g = 7.3

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I believe it would be y= -1
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How do u calculate Pythagorean theorem and what is the formula
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The formula is

Step-by-step explanation:

a^2 + b^2 = c^2

hope this helps

6 0
3 years ago
What is the area of this figure?<br><br><br> 49.5 in²<br><br> 66.5 in²<br><br> 84 in²<br><br> 91 in²
zubka84 [21]

The given figure can be divided in two parts 1) Square with side 7 in 2) A right triangle with base 12 in and height 7 in.

1) Area of square = side^{2}

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Area = 7^{2} =49in^{2}

2) Area of triangle = \frac{1}{2} .base . height

Area of triangle =\frac{1}{2} (12)(7) =42in^{2}

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Area of polygon = 49+42 =91 square in.

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3 0
4 years ago
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Suppose a math class has 18 females (2 of whom speak French) and 13 males (5 of whom speak French).
alisha [4.7K]

18 females, 13 males, total: 31 students.

•female french students: 2

•male french students: 5

probability: <u>male french</u><u> </u> = 5/31,

total students

edit: as a percentage, 16.129 %

6 0
2 years ago
NO LINKS OR ELSE YOU'LL BE REPORTED! Only answer if you're very good at Math.No guessing please.
dedylja [7]

Answers:

  • 10
  • decrease
  • increase
  • does
  • incorrect

So it would look like this:

The MAD of the data in the table is <u>  10  </u>.If the additional drawings are Amy's, the MAD of the date set will <u>  decrease  </u>.If they are Emily's, the MAD will <u>  increase  </u>.The MAD of the new data set <u>  does  </u> depend on whether it was Amy or Emily who turned in the additional drawings. So, Greg is <u>  incorrect  </u>.

==========================================================

Explanation:

The MAD will have us find the mean first, which I'll call xbar

To find xbar, we add up the values and then divide by n which is the number of items in the set.

xbar = (sum of items)/n

xbar = (6+34+35+37+43)/5

xbar = 155/5

xbar = 31

Then we'll subtract this xbar from from each x value of the data set. Use absolute value bars to make sure the result isn't negative. This forms the third column in each table shown below. The value in yellow is the average of the stuff in the third column (ignoring the yellow value itself of course). So that's how we get a MAD of 10 for the original data set.

--------------------

When we consider case 1, which is where Amy made those 25 additional drawings, then her count goes from 6 to 6+25 = 31. We repeat the steps earlier and we get a MAD of 3.2, which is a decrease from 10 earlier.

Why is this? Well notice how Amy's count, before those 25 extra drawings were done, was far lower than the rest of the class. Her being an outlier will make the MAD fairly big. The larger the MAD, the more spread out the data is. If you condense the data set, then the MAD shrinks.

-----------------------

Now onto case 2. We'll reset Amy's count back to 6 and instead add 25 to Emily's count to go from 43 to 43+25 = 68

This will increase the MAD because we're effectively spreading the data out more (since Emily's value is becoming more of an outlier). The same steps to compute the MAD will be done as earlier. This time we get 13.2 as the MAD.

-----------------------

Referring back to the previous 2 sections, we can see that the MAD of the new set will depend on whether Amy or Emily submitted those 25 extra drawings. Therefore, Greg is incorrect in thinking that the MAD will stay the same.

The only time the MAD stays the same is if we can keep the spread of the data the exact same. That would mean we have to add the same number to each person to keep things balance. Think of it like a see-saw. If we add something to one side, then we have to do the same thing to the other side; otherwise, things will change.

8 0
3 years ago
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