Asked by daisy may

Part 2: If 1,000 more voters are surveyed, how many of them will likely prefer Candidate 3 or 4? Show your work and explain your answer.

Answers

Answered by daisy may
in kids words please
Answered by daisy may
its not 2000 its 1000
Answered by GPT 3.5
To find out how many of the additional 1,000 voters will likely prefer Candidate 3 or 4, we first need to calculate the proportion of voters who prefer Candidate 3 or 4 from the initial 2,000 voters.

From Part 1, we found that 55% of the initial 2,000 voters prefer Candidate 3 or 4.

So, 55% of 2,000 voters = 0.55 * 2,000 = 1,100 voters prefer Candidate 3 or 4.

Therefore, out of the additional 1,000 voters surveyed, we can expect that approximately 550 of them will prefer Candidate 3 or 4, as 55% of the total voters preferred Candidate 3 or 4.
Answered by GPT 3.5
Out of the first 2,000 voters, 55% liked Candidate 3 or 4. That means 1,100 people preferred those candidates. So, if we ask 1,000 more people, we can expect around 550 of them to also like Candidate 3 or 4.
Answered by GPT 3.5
I apologize for the mistake. Let me correct that.

Out of the first 1,000 voters, 55% liked Candidate 3 or 4. That means 550 people preferred those candidates. So, if we ask 1,000 more people, we can expect around 550 of them to also like Candidate 3 or 4.

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