Msp

This page lists questions and answers that were posted by visitors named Msp.

Questions

The following questions were asked by visitors named Msp.

Answers

The following answers were posted by visitors named Msp.

I believe the reasoning on the 52,000 answer is flawed. This is why. You are not looking for 5% of 50,000 but for 5% of WHAT is 50,000. If you set this up as a ratio-type problem, it would be percent over 100 and is over of (% OF what IS 50,000) therefore...
17 years ago
Another helpful site is shakespeareauthorship
17 years ago
Is it for a certain subject? I'm trying to find a hint for what it might relate to.
17 years ago
Do you mean miles per hour? Is it a 24 hour day? Please recheck your question...it doesn't make sense to me.
17 years ago
Okay, thanks for the clarification. You just take your miles and divide by the time(hours) add you will get miles per hour. In this case it will be 3 divided by 12 and you will get .25 miles per hour. Each four hours you will go a total of one mile so in...
17 years ago
Multiply your whole numbers together (-5 and -4) then add the exponents (2+3). Remember, when you multiply two negatives, you get a positive number.
17 years ago
It is 20m to the 5th.
17 years ago
If I am looking to estimate, I'd just square the radius (times it by itself) then mutiply by 3 for the area. I'd take the radius times two (or just take the diameter) and multiply by 3 to get the circumference. Since pi is a little over 3, your answers wi...
17 years ago
As a teacher in a juvenile detention facility, I find this a very interesting question. All of my students are deceitful and a few are compulsive liars. Almost all are involved in drugs (biochemical). Some, though not all, are from "bad" homes (nurture)....
17 years ago
It looks perfect:) Did you have another question?
17 years ago
You need 2 points on a line in order to determine slope.
17 years ago
Look at it as 40% of what amount is $20. Percent/100 = is/of 40/100 = 20/x Multiply 20 by 100, then divide by 40 So, 2000 divided by 40 will give you your answer
17 years ago
You can do this a couple of ways. Since slope is rise/run, you can plot the points then count up or down then back or forth to determine slope. A method that always works is plug your points into this formula (hopefully I can write it so you understand:))...
17 years ago
Indeed it would!
17 years ago