Answer:
1/2 bh =1/2 ×(6×10)=30
Step-by-step explanation:
you times 1/2 by base and height
In circle O below, what is the value of f ?
Answer:
I believe the answer is 15 .
Hope it helps ^^
Someone help me please it’s for at 11:59pm
Answer:
11 sqrt 2
Step-by-step explanation:
it's a 45 45 90 triangle
Write an explicit formula for this table
Days 1 2 3 4 5
Views 17 33 49 65 81
Answer:
Step-by-step explanation:
and it's an arithmetic sequence.
7. If m∠AEB = 75°, then m∠AED =
8. If m∠1 = 35°, then m∠4 =
Answer:
7. If m∠AEB = 75°, then m∠AED = 105.
8. If m∠1 = 35°, then m∠4 = 35.
marking brainliestttt !!!
is b. the right answer?
Answer:
yes
Step-by-step explanation:
I think it is b too!!!
Answer:
Yes B is the right answer.
can someone help plz?
Answer:
The answer is: Yes
Step-by-step explanation:
1. Substitute the 2's for the x's.
2. Substitute the 3's for the y's
3. You get 4-9= -5
4. Do the same for the second problem.
5. 8-12= -4
6. Both problems are correct once the substitutions are made, therefore the answer is "Yes".
Answer:
REASONS TO KEEP OUR PROMISES
1. Introduction
Promises are valuable because they allow us to receive assurances that others will act in
certain ways and give these assurances ourselves. Assurances are worthwhile because they
can give us peace of mind, we can use them to establish and stabilize private schemes of
cooperation and, anyway, we often have good reason to want people to do (or not do) certain
things. The obligation to keep a promise derives in some way from the value that assurances
provide.1
Accounts of our fiduciary obligations divide over the role they assign to social practices.
David Hume and John Rawls argue that promising creates in others the relevant assurances
only if there exists a social practice of promising in which most everyone knows that people
generally fulfill their promises. These philosophers think that our fiduciary obligations
depend essentially on an institution of promising, but they disagree about why we have an
obligation not to violate its rules. Hume seems to think that promise-breaking is wrong in
virtue of impartial disapproval towards acts that undermine the practice of promising while
Rawls argues that it is wrong to break a promise because doing so exploits a just institution of promising from which we have voluntarily benefited.2
In contrast to these practice views,
Thomas Scanlon maintains that our obligation to keep a promise does not necessarily depend
on any social convention; instead, he argues that we ought to keep our promises because we
have a duty not to frustrate certain expectations that our promising can induce in others.3
These three views are often presented as competing accounts of the most fundamental
reason why we should keep our promises. I believe that none of them, however, can explain
our fiduciary obligations in all (or most) cases that involve binding promises. Scanlon’s
expectation view is subject to a fatal circularity in paradigm cases in which our only reason
to keep a promise is an awareness that, having made a promise, we are obligated to keep it.
Hume’s view cannot explain why we ought to keep a promise the breaking of which is
unlikely to undermine the institution of promising. And Rawls’ view (along with Hume’s)
cannot explain why it is wrong to break promises that are made when no social practice of
promising exists. Moreover, neither practice views nor expectation views alone can fully
explain the wrongs involved in breaking promises that both invoke the rules of a social
practice of promising and lead others to form certain expectations about our actions. This
suggests that there is no single, fundamental reason why we should keep our promises.
After arguing for these claims, I go on to sketch an alternative account according to
which a family of fiduciary principles, including ones similar to those suggested by Hume,
Rawls and Scanlon, explains why we ought to keep our promises. A principle is a fiduciary
principle if it explains why one or more promises are binding. On this view, no single fiduciary principle explains why all binding promises generate obligations and often one or
more fiduciary principle will apply in a given case, possibly over-determining why we should
keep that promise. For example, principles of the sort proposed by Rawls and Scanlon would
each give us sufficient reason to keep a promise that invokes the rules of a just institution of
promising and also arouses certain expectations in others. A pluralist account of this sort, I
argue, provides a better framework for understanding the nature of our fiduciary obligations.
HELP!!!!The area of a sector is 120pi with a radius of 20. What is the measure of that central angle?
A. 22
B. 108
C. 216
D. 11
Answer:
Step-by-step explanation:
22
Write an equation of the line in slope-intercept form given the following
information: slope: 3, through (2,5). *
Answer:
slope(m) =3
given point (X1,y1 ) )=(2,5)
equation of line=y-y1= m(x-x1)
y-5=3(x+2)
3x-y+11=0
Answer:
y=3x-1
Step-by-step explanation:
y-y1=m(x-x1)
y-5=3(x-2)
y=3x-6+5
y=3x-1
Please help with this its confusing somehow :(
Answer: C.
Step-by-step explanation: divide -27 by 3
what is the median for 9, 7, 7, 4, 7, 3, 6, 5,
Answer:
The Median is 6.5
Step-by-step explanation:
Other options in case
Mean - 6
Median - 6.5
Mode - 7
Range - 6
Helppppp
needdddd it
Answer:
angle don+angle gil=90°
don+ 74°=90°
don=90°-74°
don=16°
angle e + angle a=180°
128°+angle a=180°
angle a=180°-128°
angle a=52°
Answer:
1. 16°
2. 52°
Step-by-step explanation:
So!! Complementary angles add up to 90 degrees, and supplementary angles add up to 180 degrees. With this, it should be really easy. To find the measure of angle DON:
m∠DON + m∠OIL = 90°
m∠DON + 74°=90°
m∠DON=16°
For the measure of angle A:
m∠A+m∠E=180°
m∠A+128°=180°
m∠A=52°
Hope this helped!
the nearest ten 11,150 is 11,348 rounded to the nearest ten. nearest thousand 11,100 is 11,348 rounded to the nearest thousand. explain how you rounded these numbers
please don't answer with files they dont work i will try to give brainliest to who ever answers correct
Answer:
Step-by-step explanation:
When you round to the nearest ten, look at the number in the ones value i.e the last digit. If it is 5 or above it then it rounds to the top. If it is below 5 then it rounds to the bottom
e.g. 56 to the nearest ten would round to 60 because 6 is greater than 5. However 73 to the nearest ten would be 70 because 3 is less than 5.
This is why 11348 to the nearest ten is 11150. 8 is greater than 5 so it rounds to 50 instead of 40.
The same concept applies to when you round to the nearest thousand. If the number in the hundreds value is greater than 5 or is 5 your round to the top. If the number is less than 5 you round to the bottom
This is why 11348 to the nearest thousand is 11100. Since 3 is less than 5 it rounds to the bottom which is 1000 instead of 2000.
(ii) n is a negative integer.
Write down all the values of n which satisfy 2n + 13 > 6
Answer:
[tex]0 >n>-\frac{7}{2}[/tex]
Step-by-step explanation:
[tex]2n+13-13>6-13[/tex]
[tex]2n>-7[/tex]
[tex]\frac{2n}{2}>\frac{-7}{2}[/tex]
[tex]n>-\frac{7}{2}[/tex]
n is negative, so it must be less than zero, [tex]0 >n>-\frac{7}{2}[/tex]
find total surface area WILL FIVE BRAINLIEST
Use perfect squares and the number line to estimate the value of StartRoot 75 EndRoot.. A number line from 0 to 10. StartRoot 75 EndRoot. Is between 5 and 6. 6 and 7. 7 and 8. 8 and 9.
Answer:
Between 8 and 9.
Step-by-step explanation:
8^2 = 64
9^2 = 81
So square root of 75 is between 8 and 9.
The number √75 is between 8 and 9.
What is square root of a number?
A square root of a number is a value that multiplied by itself gives the same number.
Given that;
The number is,
⇒ √75
Now,
Since, The value of √75 = 8.66
And, The number 8.66 is between 8 and 9.
Thus, The number √75 is between 8 and 9.
Learn more about the square root number visit:
https://brainly.com/question/11388449
#SPJ5
The first two angles in a triangle are 70 degrees and 50 degrees. What does the third angle have to be?
60 degrees
90 degrees
30 degrees
120 degrees
Answer:
60 degrees
Step-by-step explanation:
Triangles always equal to = 180 degrees
with that being said 70 + 50 = 120
You can subtract 120 from 180
120 - 180 = 60 degrees
Your answer is A. 60 degrees
Consider the graphs of the functions f(x) and g(x)...
Answer:
As per graphs, f(x) is a quadratic function and g(x) is an exponential function.
At x = 1 both the functions have same value of 6.
At x > 1 the exponential function has a greater rate of growth.
The answer is g(x).
find the ratio (fraction) for Tan H.. I need it fast
Given:
In right triangle [tex]GHI,m\angle I=90^\circ,GH=7.5,HI=7.2,GI=2.1[/tex].
To find:
The ratio (fraction) for Tan H.
Solution:
In a right triangle,
[tex]Tan\theta=\dfrac{Perpendicular}{Base}[/tex]
In [tex]\Delta GHI[/tex].
[tex]Tan H=\dfrac{GI}{HI}[/tex]
[tex]Tan H=\dfrac{2.1}{7.2}[/tex]
It can be written as
[tex]Tan H=\dfrac{21}{72}[/tex]
[tex]Tan H=\dfrac{7}{24}[/tex]
Therefore, the fraction for Tan H is [tex]\dfrac{2.1}{7.2}[/tex] or it can be written as [tex]\dfrac{7}{24}[/tex].
hey so can anyone explain this to me i just want to make sure I did it right thanks;)
Answer:
tan P=8/15
tan Q=15/8
Step-by-step explanation:
tan P=opposite/adjacent, where 8 is the opposite, while 15 is the adjacent.
tanQ=opposite/adjacent, where 15 is the opposite, while 8 is the adjacent.
Kayla spends 2 tickets on a ride at the amusement park. She has 6 tickets left. Write a subtraction equation to show the fraction of tickets Kayla has left
Simplifying Complex Fractions
Math is garbage man
Step-by-step explanation:
Bc it sucks
Answer:
Step-by-step explanation:
How much does the Human body consume calories minus 2,400 plus 3,500 equals what (please help)
Answer:
answer is 5900 calories. hope this helps
you buy two packages of almonds and mix them together into one bowl one package is 4.08 kg and the other is 6.81 kg how much is in the bowl
can someone please help me and write out the answer
Answer:
tgtt
Step-by-step explanation:
Pls help, I really need this answer!!!!
Which statement is true? A The greatest common factor of 10 and 14 is 5. B The greatest common factor of 10 and 15 is 5. C The greatest common factor of 13 and 21 is 3. D The greatest common factor of 14 and 21 is 3.
what is 4 to the second power written in expanded form?
2 to the 4th power = 2 × 2 × 2 × 2 = 16.
Step-by-step explanation:
Answer:
16
Step-by-step explanation:
2 × 2 × 2 × 2 = 16.
Describe a sequence of transformations that verifies that these triangles are similar
help ASAP plzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
Answer:
e = 16
Step-by-step explanation:
-5e-4e = -144
-9e = -144
e = 16
Hey need more help with this test dont answer if you dont know