Numbers can be expressed, ordered and compared by a lot of
mathematical principles, properties, models and paradigms. There are different
properties of numbers to associate, group and distribute numbers. For example
commutative property of addition, 1 + 2 = 3 can be 3 = 1 + 2. Moreover, numbers
can be expressed by mathematical form, thus 100 wherein 1 is in the place order
of hundreds. And so on… other examples can be mathematical symbols or
inequality to compare numbers. For example, 1 > 2. One is less than 2.
3×2y-(1/3×3)=5×3
6y-1=15
6y-1+1=15+1
6y=16
y=8/3
Y cannot be 8
Answer:
the third option
Step-by-step explanation:
what does that mean ?
to "rationalize" it is to transform it into a rational number (that is a number that can be described as a/b, and is not an endless sequence of digits after the decimal point without a repeating pattern).
a square root of a not square number is irrational (not rational).
so, what this question is asking us to get rid of the square root part in the denominator (the bottom part).
for this we need to multiply to and bottom with the same expression (to keep the whole value of the quotient the same) that, when multiplied at the bottom, eliminates the square root.
what can I multiply a square root with to eliminate the square root ? the square root again - we are squaring the square root.
so, what works for 9 - sqrt(14) as factor ?
we cannot just square this as
(9- sqrt(14))² = 81 -2sqrt(14) + 14
we still have the square root included.
but remember the little trick :
(a+b)(a-b) = a² - b²
without any mixed elements.
so, we need to multiply (9-sqrt(14)) by (9+sqrt(14)) to get
81-14 = 67 which is a rational number.
therefore, the third answer option is correct.
Answer:
4kg : 45 x 4 + 20 = 200 minutes
5.5kg: 40 x 5.5 = 220 minutes
8kg: 35 x 8 = 280 minutes
The cooking time is directly proportional to weight in Turkey C
Hope this helps
Please mark brainiest
Answer:
Sometimes
Step-by-step explanation:
An acute angle is an angle that measures less than 90°
So, an angle that is less than 180° is sometimes acute.