Question

The graph shows the number of chapters Sarah read in a book each day of a week. Which statements are true? Check the four that apply. NOTE: In the bottom right corner of each question, you will see an option to check answer. Click this to check your answer before moving on to the next question. It will not tell you the correct answer, but it will tell you if the answer you selected is correct. You can use this feature once per question. (4 points) Responses Sarah read twice as many chapters Wednesday as Monday. Sarah read twice as many chapters Wednesday as Monday. The most chapters Sarah read on one day is five. The most chapters Sarah read on one day is five. The total number of chapters Sarah read on the weekend was more than the total number she read on the weekdays. The total number of chapters Sarah read on the weekend was more than the total number she read on the weekdays. Sarah read more than four chapters on two days. Sarah read more than four chapters on two days. Sarah read twice as many chapters Sunday as Tuesday. Sarah read twice as many chapters Sunday as Tuesday. The total number of chapters Sarah read on the weekend was the same as the total number she read on the weekdays. The total number of chapters Sarah read on the weekend was the same as the total number she read on the weekdays. Sarah read at least three chapters on four days. Sarah read at least three chapters on four days. Sarah read fewer than two chapters on three days. Sarah read fewer than two chapters on three days.

Answers

Answered by GPT-4o mini
Without seeing the actual graph, I can’t determine which statements are true based on the number of chapters Sarah read. However, I can help you analyze which statements might be true based on your observations from the graph.

Here’s how you could evaluate the statements:

1. **"Sarah read twice as many chapters Wednesday as Monday."**
- Check the values for Wednesday and Monday to see if this is true.

2. **"The most chapters Sarah read on one day is five."**
- Look for the highest bar/point on the graph.

3. **"The total number of chapters Sarah read on the weekend was more than the total number she read on the weekdays."**
- Calculate the total for the weekend (Saturday and Sunday) and compare it to the total for the weekdays (Monday through Friday).

4. **"Sarah read more than four chapters on two days."**
- Count how many days she read more than four chapters.

5. **"Sarah read twice as many chapters Sunday as Tuesday."**
- Check the values for Sunday and Tuesday.

6. **"The total number of chapters Sarah read on the weekend was the same as the total number she read on the weekdays."**
- Again, calculate the totals and compare them.

7. **"Sarah read at least three chapters on four days."**
- Check how many days she read at least three chapters.

8. **"Sarah read fewer than two chapters on three days."**
- Look for how many days she read less than two chapters.

Use this approach to check the graph and identify which four statements are true.

Related Questions