Answer:
A. Product quality is not affected by size.
Step-by-step explanation:
This statement is true because the quality of a product is not a measure of its size, which is a quantifiable factor. This means that we can have a very small-sized product which has very good quality. Size also depends on the product being manufactured. Quality is rather measured by how good the materials used in the production are.
If inferior materials are used in the production, then the product, no matter how small or big they are, would lack quality. To obtain a good and accurate measurement, a lot of time and energy should be invested.
For Wyatt's recipe the rate is:
r1 = 3.15 / 9
r1 = 0.35
For Cora's recipe the rate is:
r2 = 2.4 / 8
r2 = 0.3
The difference between both recipes is:
r1-r2 = 0.35 - 0.3 = 0.05
Answer:
0.05 cups of flour per shortcake less is needed for Cora's recipe
C. The way the sample was chosen may overrepresent or underrepresent students taking certain language classes.
The samples he chose may not be a representative sample because the number of students per foreign language class may not be the same. Since classes have different numbers of students, one may have a very large number of students while another may have only a few. Taking equal number of students per class is not a representative sample because it doesn't represent the students correctly.
The answer is 140, you just add them up and it goes by 2.