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Mathematics 9 Online
oregonduck (oregonduck):

FAN AND MEDAL FOR WHOEVER GIVES ME THE ANSWER!!!!

oregonduck (oregonduck):

Which of these is the algebraic expression for "3 times the sum of 2 and y?" 3(2 + y) 3 ⋅ 2 + y 2 + 3 ⋅ y 2(3 + y)

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Well what would "the sum of 2 and y" look like? :)

oregonduck (oregonduck):

2+y?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Right. And which answers have "2+y" in them?

oregonduck (oregonduck):

a and b

oregonduck (oregonduck):

so the answer is b?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

yes

OpenStudy (anonymous):

also ducks suck, but the answer is b

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Right. Since we're multiplying 3 by (2+y), we're gonna use a parentheses to keep 2+y by themselves. b wouldn't be our answer

oregonduck (oregonduck):

than it is a

OpenStudy (anonymous):

no because a would be distributing it

OpenStudy (anonymous):

the anwer is A

OpenStudy (anonymous):

x(y+z) would distribute the x among the other numbers but x*y+z would make you multiply first then add the last number

OpenStudy (anonymous):

oh wait

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Yes, it would be a. For b we would use PEMDAS to re-arrange it as (3*2)+y. Since what we're looking for is 3*(2+y) it would be A

OpenStudy (anonymous):

nope im wrong

OpenStudy (anonymous):

its a

oregonduck (oregonduck):

2)A set of numbers is shown below: {0, 0.6, 2, 4, 6} Which of the following shows all the numbers from the set that make the inequality 2x + 3 ≥ 7 true? {4, 6} {0, 0.6, 2} {0, 0.6} {2, 4, 6} Question 3 (Multiple Choice Worth 1 points) (08.05 MC) Meg scored 45, 48, and 56 on three tests. How many points should she get on the fourth test to get an average score of 60? 49.67 points 52.25 points 91 points 93 points

OpenStudy (anonymous):

go noles

oregonduck (oregonduck):

FSU SUCKS WE CREAMED YOU GUYS

oregonduck (oregonduck):

who cares about sports i am trying to do work

OpenStudy (anonymous):

wait it is A and B because they are practicly the same

oregonduck (oregonduck):

but i can only chose one answer

OpenStudy (anonymous):

yes so it is A

oregonduck (oregonduck):

i am going to ask a new question

OpenStudy (anonymous):

k

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