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nignag [31]
3 years ago
15

Someone please help asap!

Mathematics
1 answer:
aniked [119]3 years ago
8 0

Answer:

in order u put them in, 8 top, 12 bottem, 32 top, 30 bottem

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If you are picking a number between 1-20 what is the probability that you will pick a multiple of two or a number greater than 1
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Multiple of two has a 50 percent chance. greater than 15 is 25 percent. if both it's 10 percent
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Find the greatest common factor of 44 and 16.
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4

Step-by-step explanation:

If you prime factorization both

for 16 you get 2^4= 2^2*2^2

for 44 you get 2^2*11

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Two statements are logically equivalent when:
-BARSIC- [3]
<h2>Answer:</h2>

C. The two statements agree in point of truth or falsehood in virtue of their logical structure alone, i.e. the two statement are true or false in exactly the same conditions.

<h2>Step-by-step explanation:</h2>

For two statements to be logically equivalent, their truth values (true or false) must be the same for every variation of their constituent variables. In other words, if the truth tables of both statements are the same for every possible value of their variables, then they are logically equivalent.

For example;

<em>The two statements P ∩ (Q U R) and (P ∩ Q) ∪ (P ∩ R) are logically equivalent. </em>

If P, Q and R are all true, then;

<em>P ∩ (Q U R) = true</em>

<em>(P ∩ Q) ∪ (P ∩ R) = true</em>

<em />

If P, Q and R are all true, then;

<em>P ∩ (Q U R) = false</em>

<em>(P ∩ Q) ∪ (P ∩ R) = false</em>

<em />

If P = false, Q = true and R = true, then;

<em>P ∩ (Q U R) = false</em>

<em>(P ∩ Q) ∪ (P ∩ R) = false</em>

<em />

Checking for all other possible combinations of truth values of P, Q and R will always give the same results for the two statements, therefore, they are logically equivalent.

7 0
3 years ago
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