subject
Mathematics, 02.10.2019 14:00 BreBreDoeCCx

What is the ratio of 9 daises to 16 roses?

ansver
Answers: 2

Another question on Mathematics

question
Mathematics, 21.06.2019 17:00
Two streets intersect at a 30- degree angle. at the intersection, the are four crosswalks formed that are the same length. what type of quadrilateral is formed by the crosswalks?
Answers: 2
question
Mathematics, 21.06.2019 21:30
Design an er diagram for keeping track of information about votes taken in the u.s. house of representatives during the current two-year congressional session. the database needs to keep track of each u.s. state's name (e.g., texas', new york', california') and include the region of the state (whose domain is {northeast', midwest', southeast', southwest', west'}). each congress person in the house of representatives is described by his or her name, plus the district represented, the start date when the congressperson was first elected, and the political party to which he or she belongs (whose domain is {republican', democrat', 'independent', other'}). the database keeps track of each bill (i.e., proposed law), including the bill name, the date of vote on the bill, whether the bill passed or failed (whose domain is {yes', no'}), and the sponsor (the congressperson(s) who sponsored - that is, proposed - the bill). the database also keeps track of how each congressperson voted on each bill (domain of vote attribute is {yes', no', abstain', absent'}). additional information:
Answers: 1
question
Mathematics, 22.06.2019 04:10
The probability that a u.s. resident has traveled to canada is 0.18 and to mexico is 0.09. a. if traveling to canada and traveling to mexico are independent events, what is the probability that a randomly-selected person has traveled to both? (page 109 in the book may ) b. it turns out that only 4% of u.s. residents have traveled to both countries. comparing this with your answer to part a, are the events independent? explain why or why not. (page 119 may ) c. using the %’s given, make a venn diagram to display this information. (don’t use your answer to part a.) d. using the conditional probability formula (page 114 in the book) and the %’s given, find the probability that a randomly-selected person has traveled to canada, if we know they have traveled to mexico.
Answers: 3
question
Mathematics, 22.06.2019 07:10
How many cookies will tony have if he bakes 10 batches more than ten maximum number of batches in the table
Answers: 1
You know the right answer?
What is the ratio of 9 daises to 16 roses?...
Questions
question
Chemistry, 25.02.2021 17:00
question
English, 25.02.2021 17:00
question
Mathematics, 25.02.2021 17:00
Questions on the website: 13722363