Okay so you do not really need the circle equation. if you make a triangle with it's x length as 3 and it's y length as 4, you will be able to find the third length. Do Pythagorean theorem to find the hypotenuse.
the hypotenuse will be five after you calculate it.
sin is opposite over hypotenuse or Y over R
so... the sin is 4/5
make sure you know what quadrant your triangle is in for the negatives
Answer:
they can each sit on floor by lining equally some can move back for example the shortest ones can sit medium tall can stand and the largest people can stand in the very back
Answer:
Step-by-step explanation:
Can the sides of a triangle have lengths 5, 8, and 11?
x = number of 1-cent stamps
y = number of 8-cent stamps
z = number of 12-cent stamps
We have 31 stamps all together, so x+y+z = 31.
"I have 4 more 1-cent stamps than 8-cent stamps" means we have the equation x = y+8. Whatever y is, add 8 to it to get x. Solve for y to get y = x-8.
You also have "twice as many one cent stamps as 12 cent stamps", so x = 2z. Solving for z gets you z = 0.5x
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x+y+z = 31
x+x-8+z = 31 ... y replaced with x-8
x+x-8+0.5x = 31 ... plug in z = 0.5x
2.5x-8 = 31
2.5x = 31+8
2.5x = 39
x = 39/2.5
x = 15.6
Your teacher made a typo somewhere because we should get a positive whole number result for x (since x is a count of how many 1-cent stamps we have).