You have the correct answer. It is choice A. Nice work.
I prefer using full circles because sometimes the arcs could be too small in measure to not go where you want them to. If you're worried about things getting too cluttered (a legitimate concern), then I recommend drawing everything in pencil and only doing the circles as faint lines you can erase later. Once the construction is complete, you would go over the stuff you want to keep with a darker pencil, pen or marker. You can also use the circle as a way to trace over an arc if needed.
Choice B is false as a full circle can be constructed with a compass. Simply rotate the compass a full 360 degrees. Any arc is a fractional portion of a circle.
Choice C is false for similar reasoning as choice B, and what I mentioned in the paragraph above.
Choice D contradicts choice A, so we can rule it out. Arcs are easier to draw since it takes less time/energy to rotate only a portion of 360 degrees. Also, as mentioned earlier, having many full circles tend to clutter things up.
Answer:
solid gemontery
Step-by-step explanation: Plane geomentry is flat and soild is balls sqaures and other types of shapes.
Answer:
f(-2) =3
Step-by-step explanation:
f(x) = 9+3x
Let x=-2
f(-2) = 9+3(-2)
= 9-6
= 3
We are seeing 30, 60, 90, triangles, and 45, 45, 90, triangles.
13. 3 root 3
14. 5 root 2
15. 7/2 root 2
16. 3/2 root 2
17. 7.5 root 3
19. bc is squared root 37
20. 32 + 32 root 3
<h3>Geometric mean of 5 and 7 is 5.9161</h3>
<em><u>Solution:</u></em>
Given that,
We have to find the geometric mean of 5 and 7
The geometric mean of two numbers a and b is the square root of product of a and b
Which means,

<h3><u>Geometric mean of 5 and 7</u></h3>

Thus geometric mean of 5 and 7 is 5.9161