The converse of an if statement is a statement in which the hypothesis and conclusion are switched.
<span>You will get into college if you work hard.
The "if" part is the hypothesis.
The "then" part is the conclusion.
Rewrite the original if statement in the if-then form:
If you work hard, then you will get into college.
The hypothesis is the if part: "you work hard"
The conclusion is the then part: "you will get into college"
To write the converse, switch the hypothesis and the conclusion.
If you get into college, then you worked hard.
This happens to be choice A.
</span>
The correct answer is 2 over 12 because you can simplify it
c
Answer:
Step-by-step explanation:
Answer:
0.33
Step-by-step explanation:
<em>See comment for complete question</em>
Given


--- at-home wins
Required
The proportion of at-home games that were wins
This proportion is represented as:

Substitute values for HW and H

Divide by 20%

Express as fraction

