Answer: C) For every original price, there is exactly one sale price.
For any function, we always have any input go to exactly one output. The original price is the input while the output is the sale price. If we had an original price of say $100, and two sale prices of $90 and $80, then the question would be "which is the true sale price?" and it would be ambiguous. This is one example of how useful it is to have one output for any input. The input in question must be in the domain.
As the table shows, we do not have any repeated original prices leading to different sale prices.
Answer:
The one with arrows are the answers
->Line segment E B is bisected by Line segment D F .
->A is the midpoint of Line segment F C .
Line segment F C bisects Line segment D B.
->Line segment E B is a segment bisector.
->FA = One-halfFC.
Line segment D A is congruent to Line segment A B .
Step-by-step explanation:
I did it on edge and got it right
Standard equation of a circle: <em>(x-h)² + (y-k)² = r²</em> where <em>(h, k)</em> is the center and <em>r </em>is the radius. In the case of our equation here, <em>(x-5)² + (y+3)² = 25</em>, we can conclude that our circle has a center at (5, -3) and a radius of 5 units.
We can use the distance formula with the center (5, -3) and our point (2, 3) to see how far away they are...if the distance between them is less than the radius of the circle, it is on the interior. If it's equal, it's on the circle. If it's greater, it's on the exterior.
Distance =
Distance =
Distance =
Distance =
Distance =
Answer:
D
Step-by-step explanation:
25 and 6
Coefficient is the number in front of the unknown variable