In this exercise we have to observe the axes of the graph to associate the values of X with those of Y that correspond to 0, 5, 5, -3, -5, -3, 2, 0, 0, -1, -2, 1, 1, -1, -1, -2, 2, 3, -1.
<h3>How to calculate the Cartesian plane?</h3>
Just draw two lines: one of them vertical, starting from the point until it finds the x axis; another horizontal, starting from the point until it meets the y-axis.
Then plotting the value of X on the graph we find the following for each value of X to Y:
- X= 0 ; Y= 0;
- X= 1 ; Y= 5;
- X= 2 ; Y= 5;
- X= 3 ; Y= -3;
- X= 4 ; Y= -5;
- X= 5 ; Y= -3;
- X= 6 ; Y= 2;
- X= 7 ; Y= 0;
- X= 8 ; Y= 0;
- X= 9 ; Y= -1;
- X= 10 ; Y= -2;
- X= 11 ; Y= 1;
- X= 12 ; Y= 1;
- X= 13 ; Y= -1;
- X= 14 ; Y= -1;
- X= 15 ; Y= -2;
- X= 16 ; Y= 2;
- X= 17 ; Y= 3;
- X= 18 ; Y= -1;
See more about coordinates at brainly.com/question/23450276
Answer:
annually compounded interest at 7. 5% for three years will pay more by $22.97
Explanation:
Simple interest
A = P (1+ rt)
A = final amount
P = initial principal balance
r = interest rate
t = number of time periods elapsed
A = 10000(1+0.08x3) = $12,400
Annual compound interest
A = P (1+ r/n)^nt
A = final amount
P = initial principal balance
r = interest rate
n = number of times interest applied per time period
t = number of time periods elapsed
A = 10000(1+0.075/1)^(1x3) = $12,422.97
$12,422.97 - $12,400 = $22.97
I'm not sure if you have any options, but here are some of the typical features that almost every Victorian style house had:
- sanitation: after 1850s, each house had proper drainage, waste facilities, and a toilet
- hold and cold water: by the end of the 19th century, almost every house had tap water
- lighting: it was powered by gas, not candlelight anymore
- a basement with a cellar for storage
- sash windows
- pitched roof or irregular shape
- asymmetrical facade
- etc.
1) A change to a different amino acid called amissense mutation
2) A change to a termination codon called anonsense mutation
3) Creation of a new sequence that issilent with regard to protein sequence