Answers by visitors named: Skye

I think you should plug in when x=1,2,3,4 into the eqn. then see if it increase or decrease when you finish X=1 Plug it into the eqn. y=5(1)+18 x=2 x=3 x=4 Get it?
Yep.
Ha. Sorry B.B I didn't catch that. Reiny is right!
thanks!
Thank you so much!
Thanks so much!
Thank you very much!
what is it in the passe compose? I just returned my textbook today......
umm... which one is it? is one the regular conjugation? and the second one is passe compose? I need both.. thanks!
I needed to answer the same question. Through all of my research in the text and internet the only answer I could say that made sense was d. I happen to think that it also might be b. but couldn't find anything to back this answer up.
Thanks so much! c=56*3.14 :)
What does ^ mean?
medium- $0.238 large- $0.262 Then what do i do? I am kind of very confused.
thanks. i was a bit confused of why there were 3 numbers that is why i ignored the 3m part.. Thanks! :D
yes it was. it also said ignore all doors and windows..
thank you soo much!-- this really helps! =D
I think it is too late to change my thesis... "realizes she has made an irreversible mistake" came from my teacher...
Thanks, but isn't "written" past tense?
equation: CH4+ 2O2 = CO2 +2H20 1.11 moles of CH4 1.73 moles of O2 wait. why do we convert moles of CH4 to moles of CO2? and moles of O2 to moles of CO2?
okay, i was taught to pick one of the reactant and convert it to the other one. so i got 1.11 mole of CO2 and 1.73 mole of CO2. so that means that CH4 is the limiting reagent? 1.11 mole of CO2 * 44.01 g of cO2 is 48.9 grams of CO2
wait, i think i did it wrong. there is actually 0.865 moles of CO2 from the O2. SO the limiting reagent is O2?
*yield
thanks, i got 74.77% :)
how do u change L to grams?
thanks. q=1000g x specific heat x 67C what is the specific heat?
wait. is it 4.186 J/g*C? so the answer is 280.462 KJ?
oh okay thanks! also what would be considered as a free element? would 4Al be one?
Can you please explain how you got this, so I can understand it better?
I'm sorry but that is not a choice.
Simplify!! 54 a^2 b^3 ___________ 81 a^3 b^2 Choices are:: A. 2a^2 b _____ 3 I have revised my choices! now try B. 2a^2 ____ 3b
Can you please show me how you got this answer, because when you multiply your answer by the original divisor it does not come up to the original problem. Help I do not understand this.
Thank you!! This is correct!!!
That is so cool!! :) twins haha!!
Thank you for your help! :)
Thank you very much!!!
thank u
PLEASE!
Im depressed
I think that the answer is A. what would you guess
Yes, it is by mark twain. I tried to find a link to the story so it would be easier to answer the question but i was unable to find one :(
Thank you!
My guess is D.
Thank you Ms. Sue :)
My guess is D, is that right Ms. Sue? and thank u anonymous!! :)
thank u stephen!!
Thank you so much Ms.Sue!!
Haha, thank you!
Ok, thank you so much! :)
Thank you!! You are the best teacher on here!! :)
I know, but you respond to the majority of my question! So thank you! :)
Thank you :)
Thank you Ms.Sue for addressing that!
Ohh, ok. Is the answer never?
Thank you Ms. Sue!! :)
It says this: Some of the Indo-European groups migrated south and east. One group, the Aryans, settled in present-day Iran. Later, some of the Aryans broke away and migrated farther east, to India. Other Indo-Europeans migrated west, toward Europe. Among them were the Hittites, who settled in Asia Minor. Another group, the Celts, kept mov- ing through western Europe until they reached the British Isles. The Irish of today are descended from the Celts. As the Indo-Europeans divided and moved in different directions over vast distances, their languages grew apart. But linguists say that these languages belong to the same language family, which includes the main languages spoken today in Europe, Iran, and India. The family resem- blances between words in hundreds of different languages allow us see the routes of one of his- tory’s great migrations. Push and Pull Factors Migrations are usually caused by what historians call push and pull factors. Push factors drive people away from a place. Pull factors are what attract them to another place. The pull factor for the Indo-Europeans became the wealthy cities of the settled south. What was the push factor? It probably wasn’t some sudden catastrophe, since these migrations con- tinued for about two thousand years. More than likely it was due to increasing population. Instead of competing for pasture for their herds, some clans roamed away in search of new grazing grounds. They moved rapidly and far because they may have been the first people to domesticate and ride horses, perhaps as long ago as 3500 B.C. The Hittites Sometime before 1700 B.C., the warlike Indo-Euro- pean tribe, the Hittites, migrated into Asia Minor and built their capital in the highlands. They knew how to make iron, a secret they guarded closely because it gave them a technological advantage over their rivals. With their iron weapons, the Hit- tites could win most battles. Hittite warriors drove horse-drawn two-wheeled chariots, each of which could carry three soldiers into battle—one to drive, one to fight, and another to fight or shield his comrades. Most chariots of this time carried only two soldiers, so the Hittites had an edge. In the sixteenth cen- tury B.C., Hittite soldiers marched to Babylon and plundered the city. Later, they built an empire between the Black Sea and the Syrian coast. The Hittites were great cultural borrowers. From earlier inhabitants of Asia Minor they learned to make ceramic vases shaped like animals. From the Sumeri-ans they borrowed cunei- form, which they adapted to their own written lan-guage. They developed a code of laws similar to Ham-murabi’s. Like the Mesopota- mians, they decorated their public buildings with rows of figures carved into rock. They worshipped hundreds of gods because they accepted all the local deities they came across. Around 1275 B.C., the Hittites’ aggressive empire building faltered when they battled to a standstill against the Egyptian pharaoh Ramses II. (You’ll read more about him later in this chapter.) Soon after that, Hittite power began to fade, in part because by this time many other people had learned how to make iron, so the Hittites no longer had an advantage. The Hittite Empire crumbled around 1200 B.C., although historians aren’t sure why. The Hittites might have been conquered by a wave of invaders from lands west of the Aegean Sea. These so-called Sea People were sacking many coastal cities at the time. Because few records from the time exist, we know little about the Sea People who toppled the Hittite Empire.
I meant to put A as my guess, I am sorry. The answer is A, thank you for correcting me! :)
migrations continued for about two thousand years. More than likely it was due to increasing population.
I did!! What do you think it is??
Thank you!! :)
Sorry, didn't even realize that
I would personally think government is more important. I tried to post a link to my book, but it won't let me
That's what I think too, so after I take my test I will post the correct answer on here.
Thank you
Wouldn't you need to say Two energetic women WERE walking in the park. How is B not correct? I thought it sounded right? :/
Ohhh, no problem! Try and get them banned! That's not cool if they are messing people up on purpose!
Thank you! :)
Underlined in # 1 is: that antique firetruck from the car show # 2 is: Eddie Johnson Bridge
Thank you
Thank you!!
Thank you!
They both have the same amount! 3 * 40 = 120 40 * 3 = 120 :)
But isn't "have been walking" a verbal phrase? Then wouldn't the answer be none of the above? I found a website, but it would not let me post the url. It was under Verbal Phrase Examples.
Ok, that makes sense. Thank you for the link! :)
Thank you! :)
Ok, thank you both! :)
1: R 2: R 3: S 4: S 5: S 6: A (but) 7: D (so) 8: C (or) 9: D 10: A
Okay, 4: F 9: B 10: D Now are they correct?
Correction!! 4: R
Thank you so much! I got a 100% !! :)
Thank you!
Thank you!!
Thank you :)
B- compound subject.
Thanks!!
Thank you very much!!
Umm, okay. I just think it is D- none of the above, because I have the same question on a previous test, and the answer was compound verb and I got it correct, so I just figured the answer was none of the above.
Ummmm, C?
Ohh, then what would it be called? Just a regular sentence, like no specific name?
Thank you Lawyer!! :)
Thank you!! :-)
Thanks!!
Yay!! Thank you!
Thank you so much!
Yay!! Thanks! :)
Okay, thank you! Do you also think it is A or just B?
Thank you!!
Thanks :)
Thank you!! :)
Thank you!
Thank you Brady!! :)