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olga nikolaevna [1]
3 years ago
7

Which equation will help you solve this problem?

Mathematics
2 answers:
sveta [45]3 years ago
4 0

Answer:

8 books

Step-by-step explanation:

16/2=8

(/ is the division symbol)

NikAS [45]3 years ago
3 0

Answer:

i literally salved this question earlier, the answer is 8

Step-by-step explanation:

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What is the slope of this line?<br><br> A 1/3<br> B -3<br> C 3<br> D -1/3
aleksandr82 [10.1K]
The slope is 3 so the answer would be 3. Hope it helps! :)
4 0
3 years ago
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In ΔXYZ, ∠X=59° and ∠Y=21°. ∠XWZ=90° and XY=6.1. Find the length of XW to the nearest 10th.
dlinn [17]

Answer:

this is question is wrong it you typed it wrong

how come the triangle named XYZ and the angle wxz and if there 2 triangles one must be a failure because there is no triangle which all his angels equals more than 180°

look again and if possible take a picture of the question

3 0
3 years ago
Consider the sequence of steps to solve the equation:
pav-90 [236]

Answer:

Division Property of Equality

Step-by-step explanation:

→In Step 4, it is shown that the equation is:

3x = 30

→However, to solve for x, you must get it by itself. This means you need to get rid of the 3 that's being multiplied. So since the 3 is being multiplied to x, you must do the opposite of multiplication, which is division.

→As you can see, the total of 30 is decreased in Step 5, since it has been divided by 3, giving you a total of 10.

This shows that the property of equality that yields Step 5 is the <u>Division Property of Equality.</u>

4 0
3 years ago
Choose the correct answer with the reason
icang [17]
The answer should be D
Step by Step: |2x-2| <(or equal to) 6
Add 2 on both sides should give you, |2x| < 8
Divide both sides by 2, giving you 4
Other way, is doing the same but -2
6 0
3 years ago
Prove for any positive integer n, n^3 +11n is a multiple of 6
suter [353]

There are probably other ways to approach this, but I'll focus on a proof by induction.

The base case is that n = 1. Plugging this into the expression gets us

n^3+11n = 1^3+11(1) = 1+11 = 12

which is a multiple of 6. So that takes care of the base case.

----------------------------------

Now for the inductive step, which is often a tricky thing to grasp if you're not used to it. I recommend keeping at practice to get better familiar with these types of proofs.

The idea is this: assume that k^3+11k is a multiple of 6 for some integer k > 1

Based on that assumption, we need to prove that (k+1)^3+11(k+1) is also a multiple of 6. Note how I've replaced every k with k+1. This is the next value up after k.

If we can show that the (k+1)th case works, based on the assumption, then we've effectively wrapped up the inductive proof. Think of it like a chain of dominoes. One knocks over the other to take care of every case (aka every positive integer n)

-----------------------------------

Let's do a bit of algebra to say

(k+1)^3+11(k+1)

(k^3+3k^2+3k+1) + 11(k+1)

k^3+3k^2+3k+1+11k+11

(k^3+11k) + (3k^2+3k+12)

(k^3+11k) + 3(k^2+k+4)

At this point, we have the k^3+11k as the first group while we have 3(k^2+k+4) as the second group. We already know that k^3+11k is a multiple of 6, so we don't need to worry about it. We just need to show that 3(k^2+k+4) is also a multiple of 6. This means we need to show k^2+k+4 is a multiple of 2, i.e. it's even.

------------------------------------

If k is even, then k = 2m for some integer m

That means k^2+k+4 = (2m)^2+(2m)+4 = 4m^2+2m+4 = 2(m^2+m+2)

We can see that if k is even, then k^2+k+4 is also even.

If k is odd, then k = 2m+1 and

k^2+k+4 = (2m+1)^2+(2m+1)+4 = 4m^2+4m+1+2m+1+4 = 2(2m^2+3m+3)

That shows k^2+k+4 is even when k is odd.

-------------------------------------

In short, the last section shows that k^2+k+4 is always even for any integer

That then points to 3(k^2+k+4) being a multiple of 6

Which then further points to (k^3+11k) + 3(k^2+k+4) being a multiple of 6

It's a lot of work, but we've shown that (k+1)^3+11(k+1) is a multiple of 6 based on the assumption that k^3+11k is a multiple of 6.

This concludes the inductive step and overall the proof is done by this point.

6 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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