Question:
A cafeteria offers oranges, apples, or bananas as its fruit option. It offers peas, green beans, or carrots as the vegetable option. Find the number of fruit and vegetable options. If the fruit and the vegetable are chosen at random. what is the probability of getting an orange and carrots? Is it likely or unlikely that a customer would get an orange and carrots?
Answer:
The probability of getting an orange and carrots is 
Step-by-step explanation:
The fruits offered in cafeteria = oranges, apples, or bananas.
The vegetables offered in cafeteria = peas, green beans, or carrots.
There are 3 fruits and 3 vegetables . Therefore the total possible number of outcomes is =
= 9
Now the probability of getting an orange and carrots = 
The possibility is very unlikely to happen
$9.24 would be the total (couple extra decimals after it do not count as it's not counted over in real life nor could a penny be split)
Answer:
the two are different they will not have the same amount
Step-by-step explanation:
Rental A is $19.50 and rental B is $17.50