The inequality is still true! If you add a number, say 5 to both sides of the following inequality, does anything change?
3 < 6
3 + 5 < 6 + 5
8 < 11
The inequality is still true. We know the statement holds for subtracting the same number because, in a way, addition and subtraction are pretty much the same operation. If I subtract 5 from both sides, I can think of it like "I add negative 5 to both sides" or something along those lines. It's kind of backwards thinking.
Part A:<span> What is the mean of the data? Show your work. (4 points)</span>
Part B:<span> Use your answer from Part A to calculate the mean absolute deviation for the data. Show your work. (6 points)</span>
Answer:
1.25b
Step by step explanation:
Answer:
4. 27
Step-by-step explanation:
11-10=1 which is <=16
15-10=5 which is <=16
26-10=16 which is <=16
27-10=17 which isn't <=16
Therefore 27 doesn't satisfy the inequality
Answer:
(8, 2 )
Step-by-step explanation:
Given the 2 equations
x + 4y = 16 → (1)
- x + 3y = - 2 → (2)
Adding the 2 equations term by term will eliminate the x- term
0 + 7y = 14
7y = 14 ( divide both sides by 7 )
y = 2
Substitute y = 2 into either of the 2 equations and solve for x
Substituting into (1)
x + 4(2) = 16
x + 8 = 16 ( subtract 8 from both sides )
x = 8
solution is (8, 2 )