The answer is a rational number is one integer divided by
another, and can be represented in either decimal of fraction form. The explanation
behind this is visualize you are using long division to divide one number by one
more. You divide, and then you acquire a remainder. Then you carry down a
zero (multiply by ten) and divide again. Well, there are only so many balances
you could perhaps have. For example, for 5, your choices are 0, 1, 2, 3,
and 4. Sooner or later, you will replicate a remainder, at which fact you
will just keep dividing the same method you did last time you saw that
remainder -- and that's the reason why it repeats.
I disagree. The first one is false. No exponent rules apply if the bases AND the exponents are different.
The second one is true. Bases are the sane so you add exponents. You get 3 to the -5 power. Written with positive exponents it’s 1/3 to the 5.
Answer:
The answer to your question is:
Step-by-step explanation:
m ∠ 1 = 27°
m ∠ 1 and m ∠ 2 are supplementary
m ∠ 1 + m ∠ 2 = 180°
27° + m ∠2 = 180°
m ∠ 2 = 180° - 27°
m = 2 = 153°
Y - y1 = m(x - x1)
slope(m) = 3/4
(-4,6)....x1 = -4 and y1 = 6
now just sub...and pay attention to ur signs
y - 6 = 3/4(x - (-4)...not done yet
y - 6 = 3/4(x + 4) <===
Answer:
C
Step-by-step explanation:
The numerator being bigger would make it an improper fraction, making it larger than one.