Answer:
96
Step-by-step explanation:
Answer:
five and eight hundredths
Step-by-step explanation:
I was taught to reserve the word "and" to mark the decimal point when the number has a fraction. The integer part is "five." The fractional part is "eight hundredths." Together, the word form might be ...
five and eight hundredths.
__
If I were reading this to someone, including myself, I might say it as ...
"five point oh eight".
_____
<em>Comment on ambiguity</em>
The reason for being particular about marking the decimal point is so you don't get into trouble with something like ...
1000.13 . . . . . one-thousand and thirteen hundredths
which is different from ...
1013/100 . . . . one-thousand thirteen hundredths
Some folks will pronounce 1013 as "one-thousand and thirteen." Doing so will get you in trouble in the above situation, where you have 1013/100.
If there were actual numbers at the ends of the line,
you'd have no trouble inventing some new numbers
that fit in the space between them.
OK. Put actual numbers at the ends !
Pick up your calculator, and find the numbers for √56 and √58 .
You don't need them to be exact ... just keep a few decimal places.
√56 = 7.483...
√58 = 7.615...
There you are. Now you have actual numbers at the ends
of that piece of number line in the question. Now, can you
make up numbers that fit between them ?
Here are a few that I invented:
7.484
7.485
7.486
7.599
7.600
7.614
You should make your own.
Don't worry about running out of numbers ...
there are an infinite number of them.
Y=0
Why?
There is no oblique asymptote because the degree of the numerator is less than or equal to the degree of the denominator.
No Oblique Asymptotes
Hopefully this helped
Answer:
i just did this one it is YES
Step-by-step explanation: