300; Since EF is the only segment not included in FHE, just subtract the 60 degrees there from 360 to get the sum of the rest of the circle
360-60 = 300
Hopefully this is right, i'm a little rusty on geometry
So,
The secret to solving problems with ratios is to find the value of one unit.
5:7 = 12 units total
To find one unit, divide the total number of students by the total number of units.
600/12 = a
Simplify
50/1 = a
50 = a
The value of each unit is 50.
Now, multiply the units by the numbers in the ratio.
50(5) = b
250 = boys
50(7) = x
350 = x
There are 350 girls.
To answer this, we need to use the rules of geometric shapes. An equilateral triangle is equiangular, meaning all its angle measures are equal. Since all triangles' angles add up to 180°, simply divide 180 by three to find the angle measure of each angle:

Therefore, the measure of the triangle's angle is
60°Next, we know that a characteristic of a rectangle is that each angle must be a right angle, or an angle with a measure of
90°.
Now, all we have to do is use the sum of all the angle measures to figure out the missing piece:

The missing angle measure, angle
x, equals 18°.
Hope this helps!
Answer:
24
Step-by-step explanation:
because it is 24 radius
<h3>Answer: choice A) </h3><h3>tan(Y) = 6/7 and tan(Z) = 7/6</h3>
Recall that the tangent of an angle is equal to the ratio of the opposite over adjacent sides
tan(angle) = opposite/adjacent
For reference angle Y, the opposite side is XZ = 6 and the adjacent side is XY = 7, so,
tan(Y) = XZ/XY = 6/7
For tan(Z), things will swap. The opposite side is now XY = 7 and the adjacent side is now XZ = 6
tan(Z) = XY/XZ = 7/6
We do not use the hypotenuse sqrt(85) at all in this problem because the tangent ratio does not involve the hypotenuse.