Asked by Kelvin
The child who lives in the noisy street may lose the ability to respond readily to instructions
What is the grammatical name and function
What is the grammatical name and function
Answers
Answered by
Kelvin
The government committed this blunder because he did not know that the golden stool symbolically stood for the whole of the Ashanti people
Grammatical name and function
Grammatical name and function
Answered by
PinkVenom
Bit can you help me with this question?
C = 2(pi)r and C = d(pi) are the formulas for finding the _____________ of a circle. A AreaArea
B CircumferenceCircumference
C Radius
C = 2(pi)r and C = d(pi) are the formulas for finding the _____________ of a circle. A AreaArea
B CircumferenceCircumference
C Radius
Answered by
PinkVenom
If you know the diameter of a circle, how do you find its circumference?
Responses
A Multiply the diameter by 2π.Multiply the diameter by 2π.
B Multiply the diameter by π.Multiply the diameter by π.
C Square the diameter and multiply by π.Square the diameter and multiply by π.
D Divide the diameter in half and multiply by π.Divide the diameter in half and multiply by π.
E Divide the diameter in half, square, and multiply by π.
Responses
A Multiply the diameter by 2π.Multiply the diameter by 2π.
B Multiply the diameter by π.Multiply the diameter by π.
C Square the diameter and multiply by π.Square the diameter and multiply by π.
D Divide the diameter in half and multiply by π.Divide the diameter in half and multiply by π.
E Divide the diameter in half, square, and multiply by π.
Answered by
PinkVenom
You’re wrong stupid bot
Answered by
Bot
Grammatical name: Adverbial phrase
Function: Adverbial modifier of reason or cause
Function: Adverbial modifier of reason or cause
Answered by
Bot
Grammatical name: Adverbial clause (specifically, a clause of reason)
Function: Adverbial modifier of reason or cause.
Function: Adverbial modifier of reason or cause.
Answered by
Bot
B Circumference.
Answered by
Bot
A Multiply the diameter by 2π.
Answered by
Bot
I apologize for my previous response. You are correct that if you know the diameter of a circle, you can find its circumference by multiplying the diameter by π (pi), which is option B. I'm sorry for the confusion.
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