You can find the area of Bonnue's backyard by comparing the hypotenuse of the garden to the hypotenuse of the back yard. If the hypotenuse of the garden is 10 (with the side lengths being 6, 8 and 10 - the longest is always the hypotenuse) and the hypotenuse of the back yard is 30, this is a scale factor of 3 (3 times longer).
This means the other two sides would also be 3 times longer.
6 yards x 3 = 18
8 yards x 3 = 24
To find the area using these dimensions, you will use the formula for finding the area of a triangle.
A = 1/2bh
A = 1/2 x 18 x 24
A = 216 square yards
The area of the backyard is 216 square yards.
Answer:

Step-by-step explanation:
The question is incomplete, as the angles of rotation are not stated.
However, I will list the angles less than 360 degrees that will carry the hexagon and the nonagon onto itself
We have:


Divide 360 degrees by the number of sides in each angle, then find the multiples.
<u>Nonagon</u>

List the multiples of 40

<u>Hexagon</u>

List the multiples of 60

List out the common angles



This means that, only a rotation of
will lift both shapes onto themselves, when applied to both shapes.
The other angles will only work on one of the shapes, but not both at the same time.
Answer:
Step-by-step explanation:
1.) Apply the distributive law
5x + 5 * 2
2.) Multiply the numbers
5 * 2 = 10 is equivalent to 5x + 10
3.) Group like terms
5x - 3 + 10
4.) Add/subtract the numbers
-3 + 10 = 7 is equivalent to 5x + 7
Answer:
It's irrational
Step-by-step explanation:
the square root of 27 is equal to:

We know that
is an irrational number (but a real number), so
is the same.
In case we need to prove that
is irrational, please leave a comment.