It shows the Ora scale for area multiply width and length
80 square units
Divide the figure into 4 small triangles, 2 rectangles, and one big rectangle on the center.
Area of ONE small triangle:
1/2 • 2 • 2 = 2 square units
Multiply that by 4 because we have 4 small triangles: 2 • 4 = 8 square units
Area of ONE small rectangle:
2 • 6 = 12 square units
Multiply that by 2 bcos we have 2 of those rectangles: 12 • 2 = 24 square units
Area of the big rectangle on the center:
6 • 8 = 48 square units
ADD the area of the big rectangle, 4 small triangles, and 2 small rectangles:
48 + 24 + 8 = 80
FINAL ANSWER: 80 square units
BRAINLIEST WILL BE APPRECIATED IF I GOT THIS RIGHT (pls comment me back if my answer was correct)
Have a nice day -SpaceMarsh
Answer:
Equation of the line in slope-intercept form is y=35x+35
Step-by-step explanation:
hmu if you need more help
Here's the rule for working with these things:
There are 3 signs associated with a fraction:
=> the sign of the numerator
=> the sign of the denominator
=> the sign of the whole fraction; (if the fraction were in
parentheses, this sign would be written outside).
-- You can change any 2 of them without changing the value of the fraction.
-- Changing any 1 of them changes the effective sign.
___________________________________
Now, you said the fraction is negative.
So, let's start with the positive fraction, and see the different ways
that we could make it a negative fraction:
=> mark only the numerator negative
=> mark only the denominator negative
=> put parentheses around the fraction, and mark it negative outside
If you do any one of these things to a normal positive fraction,
it turns into a negative fraction.
Look at the choices you listed in the question:
-- in the numerator only ? Yes. That makes it a negative fraction.
-- in the denominator only ? Yes. That makes it a negative fraction.
-- both ? No. That makes it the same as a positive fraction.
-- put parentheses around the fraction, and a negative sign outside ?
Yes. This makes it a negative fraction.
-- it doesn't matter ? No. I hope you can see that it does matter.
Have I confused you ?
Is this more than you wanted to know ?