Answer:
$204.4
Step-by-step explanation:
The four chairs bought in June cost $35 each, all together $140. Then they bought 2 more chairs on sale for 8% off of $35 each or 92% of $35 which is $32.2 each, all together $64.4. Both buy's together would then equal $204.4
About 15 because 9 times 5 = 45 reminder 3 than you add 3 times 5 = 15
The answer is B) ii
The notation "p --> q" means "if p, then q". For example
p = it rains
q = the grass gets wet
So instead of writing out "if it rains, then the grass gets wet" we can write "p --> q" or "if p, then q". The former notation is preferred in a math class like this.
So when is the overall statement p --> q false? Well only if p is true leads to q being false. Why is that? It's because p must lead to q being true. The statement strongly implies this. If it rained and the grass didn't get wet, then the original "if...then" statement would be a lie, which is how I think of a logical false statement.
If it didn't rain (p = false), then the original "if...then" statement is irrelevant. It only applies if p were true. If p is false, then the conditional statement is known to be vacuously true. So this why cases iii and iv are true.
Answer:
(3C1 × 4C1)/12C2
Step-by-step explanation:
Total electives = 3 + 4 + 5 = 12
Art: 3C1
History: 4C1
1 Art & 1 History = 3C1 × 4C1
Probability = (3C1 × 4C1)/12C2