The numeric value of the expression d² + 3a + 6 + a when a = 2 and d = 5 is of 39.
<h3>How to find the numeric value of an expression?</h3>
The numeric value of a function is found replacing each instance of a variable by the value of the input for which we want to find the numeric value.
For this problem, the expression is given by:
d² + 3a + 6 + a
We want to find the numeric value when a = 2 and d = 5, hence:
5² + 3(2) + 6 + 2 = 25 + 6 + 6 + 2 = 39.
More can be learned about the numeric values of a function at brainly.com/question/14556096
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Hey!
So what you can do is:
1 x 1.5 = 1.5(2nd term)
1.5 x 1.5=2.25(3rd term) x 1.5=3.375(4th term) x 1.5 = 5.0625(5th term)
5.0625 x 1.5=7.59375(6th term)x1.5=<span> 11.390625
</span>11.390625 x1.5= 17.0859375(8th term)x1.5=<span> 25.62890625</span>(9th term)
The answer is D!
Hope this helps!
A) an answer that cannot be written as a fraction.
The first thing you always do with equations like these is get the y alone by moving everything to the other side. Once this is done, you take the opposite reciprocal of the slope. For example, number a, when you have y alone, is y=-1x+2. So the opposite reciprocal of the slope would be just 1, so the resulting equations would be y=1x+2.
Consider factors of 42, then if the factors can be added or subtracted.
42 = 42 * 1
42 = 21 * 2
42 = 14 * 3
42 = 7 * 6
Since none of these can be added or subtracted to equal 15, no intergers satisfy these criteria.