2 cakes - Theresa's and Joe's
Theresa's cake had 6 pieces after she cut it. (2 times the size of Joe's pieces)
Joe's cake had 12 pieces after he cut it. (1/2 the size of Theresa's pieces)
We know that 8/12ths of ONE cake were eaten and that Joe ate 2 of his pieces.
We want to know how many pieces Theresa ate of her cake. Keeping in mind that her pieces are equal to 2 of Joe's pieces we can solve this question.
8/12 eaten total
if 2/12 by Joe
then 8-2 = 6, 6/12 by Theresa
(BUT: Theresa's pieces were twice the size of Joe's so we will divide by 2)
6/12 = 3/6
Answer: Theresa ate 3 pieces of her cake
Answer:
It is 40 degrees.
Step-by-step explanation:
You can start off by understanding this is not a right angle (exactly 90 degrees, think of a corner of a room) or and obtuse angle (more than 90 degrees, bigger than a right angle). With that information we know that it is an acute angle (less than 90 degrees, smaller than a right angle). With that we have 40 and 50 degrees left. When you compare the angle with the 40 degrees one, it is the same size. The angle 1 is a reflection of the triangle with the 40 degrees angle. Hope this helps :)
Answer: Δx = 0.5
Step-by-step explanation:
We have the interval:
[−3, −1]
and we partition it into 4 equal intervals.
first, the range of our interval is equal to the difference between the extremes, this is:
-1 - (-3) = -1 + 3 = 2
Then, if we divide it into 4, we have 4 segments with a range of:
2/4 = 0.5
Then the subinterval delta is 0.5, and the 4 intervals are:
[−3, -2.5], [−2.5, −2], [−2, −1.5], [−1.5, −1]
Answer:
∠B = 60°
Step-by-step explanation:
They are supplementary angles, which means they add up to 180°.
∠B + ∠A = 180
? + 120 = 180
? = 180 - 120
? = 60°
The first one is the answer to the question