Answer: A. 9567m
i hope i'm correct let me know if i'm wrong
-- The graph looks like a line that passes through the origin,
and slopes up to the right at a 45-degree angle.
-- Point #1 on the line:
. . . . . Pick any number.
. . . . . Write it down twice.
. . . . . Call the first one 'x'. Call the second one 'y'.
-- Point #2 on the line:
. . . . . Pick any other number.
. . . . . Write it down twice.
. . . . . Call the first one 'x'. Call the second one 'y'.
-- Point #3 on the line:
. . . . . Pick any other number.
. . . . . Write it down twice.
. . . . . Call the first one 'x'. Call the second one 'y'.
Rinse and repeat, as many times as you like,
until the novelty wears off and you lose interest.
rounded part is a semicircle so the area for that is the area of a circle ÷ 2
so
area of the rectangle + (area of the circle ÷ 2) = answer
24 * 14 = 336 = area of the rectangle
14 ÷ 2 = r
(pi * 7^2) ÷ 2
(pi * 49) ÷ 2 = 153.86 ÷ 2 = 76.93 = area of semicircle
336 + 76.93 = 412.93 ft^2 = answer
ΔHGE and ΔFGE are congruent by the Angle-Side-Angle Congruence Theorem (ASA).
<em><u>Recall:</u></em>
- A segment that divides an angle into equal parts is known as an angle bisector.
- Two triangles are congruent by the ASA Congruence Theorem if they share a common side and have two pairs of congruent angles.
In the diagram given, Angle bisector, GE, divides ∠HEF into congruent angles, ∠HEG ≅ ∠GEF.
Also divides ∠FGH into congruent angles, ∠HGE ≅ ∠FGE.
Both triangles also share a common side, GE
<em>This implies that: ΔHGE and ΔFGE have:</em>
two pairs of congruent angles - ∠HEG ≅ ∠GEF and ∠HGE ≅ ∠FGE
a shared side - GE
Therefore, ΔHGE and ΔFGE are congruent by the Angle-Side-Angle Congruence Theorem (ASA).
Learn more about ASA Congruence Theorem on:
brainly.com/question/82493
Answer:
I'm thinking it's going to be C. 6 units
Step-by-step explanation: