Yea..the attachment is not showing up for me which is super weird...>.<
For this question, we want to match the width of the smaller rectangle with the width of the larger rectangle, and we want to match the length of the smaller rectangle with the length of the larger rectangle.
Thus, we have two possible answers.
![\frac{4}{8} = \frac{12}{24}](https://tex.z-dn.net/?f=%20%5Cfrac%7B4%7D%7B8%7D%20%3D%20%20%5Cfrac%7B12%7D%7B24%7D%20)
OR
![\frac{8}{4} = \frac{24}{12}](https://tex.z-dn.net/?f=%20%5Cfrac%7B8%7D%7B4%7D%20%3D%20%20%5Cfrac%7B24%7D%7B12%7D%20)
Thus, B is our answer.
Answer:
<h2>129</h2>
Step-by-step explanation:
Use PEMDAS:
P Parentheses first
E Exponents
MD Multiplication and Division (left-to-right)
AS Addition and Subtraction (left-to-right)
![4^2\times2^3-(14-16)\div2\\\\=16\times8-(-2)\div2\\\\=128+2\div2\\\\=128+1\\\\=129](https://tex.z-dn.net/?f=4%5E2%5Ctimes2%5E3-%2814-16%29%5Cdiv2%5C%5C%5C%5C%3D16%5Ctimes8-%28-2%29%5Cdiv2%5C%5C%5C%5C%3D128%2B2%5Cdiv2%5C%5C%5C%5C%3D128%2B1%5C%5C%5C%5C%3D129)
5 4/5 is a mixed number of 29/5.