5(x - 3) +6 = 5x - 9 has infinitely many solutions
<h3><u>Solution:</u></h3>
Given equation is 5(x - 3) +6 = 5x - 9
We have to find whether the given equation has one, zero, or infinitely many solutions
Let us solve the given equation
5(x - 3) + 6 = 5x - 9
Let us use BODMAS rule to solve the given equation
According to Bodmas rule, if an expression contains brackets ((), {}, []) we have to first solve or simplify the bracket followed by of (powers and roots etc.), then division, multiplication, addition and subtraction from left to right
So let us first solve for brackets in given equation
5x - 15 + 6 = 5x - 9
5x - 9 = 5x - 9
0 = 0
Since the statement is true, there are infinitely many solutions
Answer:
its 14.32
Step-by-step explanation:
because if you line all the numbers up and you look in the hundreds place 3 is the biggest number
In fraction 1/2 in decimal 2.5
Fractions that aren't equivalent would be 30/60, 34/60 and anything that cannot be the same as 36/60.
Answer:
2×10−4
Step-by-step explanation:
To change 0.0002 to scientific notation, move the decimal to the right 4 places so that you get 2. The exponent on the base 10 will be -4 because the decimal was moved to the right 4 places