<u>Answer:</u>
<u>Step-by-step explanation:</u>
We know from the question that the student earned $12.50 <em>per hour</em>.
Using this information, we can say that if the student worked for <em>h </em>hours, they would make a total of 12.50 × <em>h </em>dollars.
We also know that the total money they earned is $2500.75.
∴ Therefore, we can set up the following equation:
From here, if we want to, we can find the number of hours worked by simply making <em>h</em> the subject of the equation and evaluating:
<em>h </em>=<em> </em>
= 200.6 hours
Answer:
Step-by-step explanation:
Yes, it's reasonable.
What you are doing is solving the question by rounding. You come up with an answer. Suppose you loose the decimal somewhere and you get 0.36? Is that reasonable? Do you just write the answer in the provided blank and move on. What now?
You get it wrong?!!
But your estimate should be about 9/3 = 3. Now you look at your calculator with great misgivings, because it made a mistake. Did it or did you? Well ultimately you did, but you have to blame something. So the calculator takes the heat.
Who knows? Maybe the decimal doesn't work. It's stuck or something. In any event you should be aware that there's no way the answer could be 0.36 when you estimate it to be 3.
So you need help with creating the table ?
The second one is correct
Actually, yes, it is possible for two different numbers to give the same result when squared.
In my last answer, I wrote that it wasn't, but I realize now where my mistake was made.
When a number like positive 4 is squared, the answer is 16. When a number like negative 4 is squared, the answer is also 16. I think that the only time when two different squared numbers have the same result is when they are the same number but have a different positive/negative sign.
I hope this helps.