A) 1224 m3 B) 2160 m3 C) 6480 m3 D) 2851 m3 A) 96 ft2 B) 24 ft2 C) 48 ft2 D) 38 ft2
all you should have to do is mutiply hieght times width
so the first one would be 30*24*30
whats your answer to the first one
@Katy
i was gonna do that >:(
hmph
lol beat u
i was typing more, that's why
ima take this little thing to general
guys quit im trying to help her here
Katy we can help just respond to Mickey's question
correct
as fart as i know the second answer u got for the other one is correct too
far*
um thats all i know for now srry
get a mod they help better tbh
@Eiwoh2 can you help please
what do u mean i literally basically gave her the answers
i mean on the second one
oh ok
@dude @darkknight @imqwerty
@Vocaloid pls halp
Did you get a lesson to go with these assignments? That should've taught you about the Geometry questions you need help with.
What was the lesson about?
Yes. Is this an exam? With other questions other than this one?
Strange. All right, well, there had to be something that taught you how to do this. I don't believe anyone would just give you a question like this without information to learn from. Right now, it's looking to me like a question to measure the volume.
That's where i'm confused upon. There's no formula I can find that contains a volume for a glass like this. Just the usual: volume of a cylinder, volume of a sphere, volume of a cone, etc.
That's why i'm saying the lesson provided to you might explain it. I can't find anything on this question.
I'm going to give you the formula for the volume of a cylinder to see if it helps anything. The volume V of a cylinder with radius r is the area of the base B times the height h . V = Bh or V = πr^2h
I think the volume of a cylinder is best for this question right now. Do you know how to use it in accordance with the question?
https://www.web-formulas.com/Math_Formulas/Geometry_Volume_of_Cylinder.aspx Try visiting that link. It has what you need to do. If you know how to plug in the proper height of the glass (3in) and the width of the glass (5in)
Yes, that is the volume of the cylinder formula. Now attempt to plug it in to your question.
If that's how you did it, then it's important you tried your best. Now the question says to round to the nearest hundredth. So what's 58.875 to the nearest hundredth?
\(\color{#0cbb34}{\text{Originally Posted by}}\) @Katy 58.88? \(\color{#0cbb34}{\text{End of Quote}}\) This is correct. :)
Now, it's worth to say I don't know if it's the correct answer. However, you did the work and did your best based on what you could understand. If it's incorrect, i'm sure you'll at least get credit for showing work.
Now, where is the Question? Future users can search up the question and it might come up. Stop deleting your posts, it is frustrating for people and causes disrespect. So next time keep n mind not to delete your posts.
Oh, I just realized they deleted their responses. Wow.
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