In the whole wide world of math, there is only one number that equals 19.
That number is . . . . . . . . . . wait for it . . . . . . . . . . 19 .
Answer
I believe it is 195
Step-by-step explanation:
1 9 and 5 are odd 1+9 is 10
and 195 is less than 200
The second choice is correct because the opposite angles along the horizontal transversal are congruent.
The answer is the atomic mass. Hope this helps!!
Looking at the problem, you can come up with an equation for the consecutive numbers.

If we expand the second term:

Combine like terms:

You can reduce this by dividing both sides of the equation by two:

And we transpose 170 to get a standard quadratic form that the right side will be zero:

Then factor the left side:

Find out the values of x that makes each factor = 0
x + 14 = 0
x = -14
We can eliminate the negative symbol because the problem is asking for positive even integers.
and;
x - 12 = 0
x = 12
Now we can say that the first positive integer is 12 and the second one is 14