Experiental probability is the correct choice because you will have actual data from an experiment that you are using to create the ratio of outcomes to attempts. This is the scientific and mathematical name for a tested ratio. Theoretical probability, on the other hand, is what you would expect to happen if you were to perform the test.
I'm pretty sure it would be
B) Green Street
Since Red Road appears to be vertical.
You may need to sit down with your parents or with your teacher and
go over how to add and subtract fractions.
1). "Perimeter" means the distance all the way around the square.
With a square, all 4 sides are the same length. With <u>this</u> square,
every side is 1-1/4 inches long.
Perimeter = length of all 4 sides= (1-1/4) + (1-1/4) + (1-1/4) + (1-1/4) =
(1 + 1 + 1 + 1) + (1/4 + 1/4 + 1/4 + 1/4) =
4 + 4/4 = <em>5 inches</em> .
2). (2-3/8) + (1-7/8) = (2 + 1) + (3/8 + 7/8) =
(3) + (10/8) =
3 + 1-1/4 = <em>4-1/4 .</em>
3). The difference is (1-1/6) minus (5/6) .
Before you start to do the subtraction, write the (1-1/6) as (7/6) .
Then the subtraction is (7/6) - (5/6) = 2/6 = <em>1/3</em> .
4). This one is almost the same kind of problem as #3.
It's another subtraction.
If you need (2-1/4) all together, and you already have (1-3/8),
then the amount you still have to find, or borrow, or buy, is the
difference between those two numbers.
(2-1/4) minus (1-3/8) .
The trick is to write the (2-1/4) in some form that you'll be able to
subtract (1-3/8) from it. When I learned how to do that, it was called
'borrowing', but I think now it's called 'regrouping'.
We need to work on (2-1/4):
-- take 1 from the 2, and change it into fourths.
2-1/4 = 1 and 4/4 and 1/4 = 1 and 5/4
-- Now, take those 5/4, and turn them into eighths.
Each fourth makes 2 eighths. So 5/4 = 10/8.
Now, the (2-1/4) has turned into 1-10/8 .
We did NOT change the value. It's still the same amount
as 2-1/4 , but it's just written in a different way.
And now the subtraction is easy:
(2-1/4) minus (1-3/8) =
(1-10/8) minus (1-3/8) = (zero and 7/8).
You need <em>7/8 inch</em> more string than you already have.
Answer:
0.8
Step-by-step explanation: