Answer:
1) Part A)
Liters Mililiters
1 1,000
5 5,000
8 8,000
14 14,000
2) Part B)
One way to convert 4.2 liters to milliliters is to <u> multiply </u> the number of liters by the number of milliliters in 1 liter. This means there are <u> 4,200 </u>milliliters in 4.2 liters. The cafeteria has the greatest amount of <u> orange </u>juice, the second greatest amount of <u> grape </u> juice, and the least amount of <u> cranberry </u>juice.
Explanation:
<u>1) Data:</u>
- Grape juice: 8,000 mililiters
- Cranberry juice: 4.2 liter
- Orange juice: 12,000 mililiters
- There are 1,000 mililiers in 1 liter
<u>2) Part A:</u>
<u>Table:</u>
The table is garbled. This is what the tables could look like:
Liters Mililiters
1 1,000
5 5,000
8 8,000
14 14,000
You can see that the table shows a direct relationship between the number of mililiters and the number of liters:
- 1,000/1 = 1,000
- 5,000/5 = 1,000
- 8,000/8 = 1,000
- number of mililiters / liters = 1,000
<u>3) Part B)</u>
Fill in the blanks to explain how Landon can convert 4.2 liters of cranberry juice to mililiters so he can compare the amounts of the different juices:
i) One way to convert 4.2 liters to milliliters is to <u> multiply </u> the number of
liters by the number of milliliters in 1 liter.
- As demonstrated above there is a direct relationship between the number of mililiters and the number on liters, then you must multiply the number of liters by the proportionality constant to find the number of mililiters.
ii) This means there are <u> 4,200 </u>milliliters in 4.2 liters.
- That is the product 4.2 × 1,000 = 4,200.
iii) The cafeteria has the greatest amount of <u> orange </u>juice, the second greatest amount of <u> grape </u> juice, and the least amount of <u> cranberry </u>juice.
Rank the amounts:
↑ ↑ ↑
orange grape cranberry
Answer:
680
8√5=17.8
16√5=75.7
32√5=71.5
Step-by-step explanation:
Question options:
A. He should report them directly on form 1040
B. He should report them on form 8949 and then on schedule D
C. He should report them on schedule D
D. He is not required to report them until he sells the underlying securities
Answer:
B. He should report them on form 8949 and then on schedule D
Explanation:
John has shares which have capital gains from a mutual fund and a brokerage account. In order to report his taxes, he would need to use the Schedule D(form 1040) for his mutual fund capital gains and the form 8949 for his brokerage capital gains. The brokerage capital gains is then transferred to schedule D.