Concluding, the equations that do not accurately represent the data in the scatter plot are B, C, and D.
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Which equations do not accurately represent the data in the scatter plot?</h3>
By looking at the scatter plot, we can see that as we read from left to right, the number of shoes sold (y variable) decreases.
Then the linear fit must have a negative slope, from that, we can discard options B and C.
Now, we also can see that the line starts almost at y = 70.
If you look at the option D, you can see that the constant term of that line is -70, so we can also discard that option.
Concluding, the equations that do not accurately represent the data in the scatter plot are B, C, and D.
If you want to learn more about scatter plots:
brainly.com/question/6592115
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Answer: I think its B
Step-by-step explanation: hoped this helped :)
Assuming the coin is fair, probability of getting one tail is 50%, probability of getting two tails in a row is 50%*50% = 25% or 1/4
Answer:
Step-by-step explanation:
Given is a function of x

When y=0 we get x=0 and infinity
Hence x intercept is 0 and one asymptote is x axis.
When x=0 , y =0


Maxima at x=1, and point of inflection is at x=2
Increasing upto x=1 and then decreases
Graph is enclosed
The example I would be using is the level of a see-saw and take
a point 1 /x of the way amid the middle and the left end. If you change
the point vertically by f feet, the far right finish transfers vertically
by f×−x feet. If you push down, f would be negative then you are
multiplying two negative numbers for a positive result, this means that the
other end moves up.