1 and 2 are ok
3 is eponential
as in
(1,2) (2,4) (3,8) (4,16) ...
where the common ratio is 2
y = 2^x
linear ****
quadratic
exponential
none of the above
2. Which kind of function best models the set of data points (–3, 18), (–2, 6), (–1, 2), (0, 11), and (1, 27)? linear
quadratic *******
exponential
none of the above
3. What function can be used to model data pairs that have a common ratio? linear ****???
quadratic
exponential
none of the above
I marked by them but I am not really sure on these
3 is eponential
as in
(1,2) (2,4) (3,8) (4,16) ...
where the common ratio is 2
y = 2^x
---------------------
1.A - linear
2.D - none of the above
3.c - exponential
D.B - a=25g+100
2. D
3. C
4. B
Thanks, awnsers.
2. D
3. C
4. B
100% correct, trust me ;)
A
D
C
B
Is correct!
🐌
I really like that snail emoji lol
\/
D
C
B
C
?
All of these are correct. I just took the quick check. I just don't know what # 6 is. But I do know that it isn't "B". Good luck.
A
D
C
B
C
D
A
D
C
B
D
C
B
100% Good luck and have a good one!
Also, you can't incorrectly color a picture of a chameleon ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
D
C
B
100%
2: D, none of the above
3: C, exponential
5: C, The graphs of exponential functions eventually generate y-values greater than those of linear and quadratic functions.
6: D, $885.78
A
D
C
B
100%
1. A - linear
2. D - none of the above
3. c - exponential
4 .B - a=25g+100
:)
D
C
B
Is correct for U5L7
Sincerely,
Joe Biden