<p>Sorry, not all scores come up online either at the same time..</p>
<p>was 4 13/16 choice C?</p>
<p>1.503*10^n ………………………. -3</p>
<p>wasn't this -4? I am pretty sure it was 0.0001503. I counted the 0's.</p>
<p>parabola . y = (x+3)^2 - 2</p>
<p>the problem asked transition to the right and down 2? no? Its (x-3)^2-2</p>
<p>cake: area of foil . 128</p>
<p>what was the dimensions for this cake area problem?</p>
<p>q.#60
. -2xy
What was this question?</p>
<p>does anybody know the question to the angle Q thing?
Had no idea how to do it.
There was a 3/4 circle with Q above it and two lines with one being X-axis.</p>
<p>for the cake one, I think it was the last one for the dimension.
was it 150 or something for diameter and 55 or something for parameter?
Im sure it was the last one (or was it the dimension of the room one?)</p>
<p>Dude seriously first of all that slope was negative, also it was (-1/2), the reason its not 3/4 is because the right triangle isn't perpendicular to the x axis.</p>
<p>I think you are talking about the wrong problem. That problem had nothing to do with slopes, it was to fine the cosine of angle Q</p>
<p>tmzkdl2668- 180/54... answer was 15x12. </p>
<p>the science notation one was definitely raised to the -4.</p>
<p>the shifting was (x-3)^2 -2. that one you could have just plugged into the calculator and graphed.</p>
<p>i'm agreeing with thte cake problems.</p>
<p>I had trouble with (among others) the cosine question... 3/5 anyone?</p>
<p>and the very last one was -2xy... 100% sure on that one.</p>
<p>Are you guys sure above that log w^x one? The problem said x was an integer greater than 1. So it couldn't have been -4, -3, 0, or 1/3. It had to be the other one. I can't remember what it was?</p>
<p>Also, what's the answer to the tricolor cat one? "If a cat is tricolor, then it is female"</p>
<p>I put if a cat is not tricolor, it is not female. </p>
<p>Also, the problem about the son and the father. The father was 75 inches tall and the son was 50. They gave you a big triangle with a base of 120, and a portion of the base d. I guessed 40, because it looked smaller than half the base, so I eliminated anything greater than 60, so there was only 20 and 40 left, and 20 looked too small.</p>
<p>Oh, one more. The 2nd to last one. It had a triangle with points A, B, and C and it said the slope of point C won't change the area of the triangle. Wasn't the slope of C 0 then, because all the other slopes would affect the slope of the triangle?</p>
<p>"Also, the problem about the son and the father. The father was 75 inches tall and the son was 50. They gave you a big triangle with a base of 120, and a portion of the base d. I guessed 40, because it looked smaller than half the base, so I eliminated anything greater than 60, so there was only 20 and 40 left, and 20 looked too small."</p>
<p>Hahahahah I thought and guessed the same thing.....we're practically twins I think</p>
<p>If you remember. It says the drwaings are NOT to scale. The Answer im pretty sure was 80.</p>
<p>This distance between the boy and the end was 80. The distance between the dad and the end was 120. The distance between the dad and the boy was 40. The answer is 40. You had to use ratios.</p>
<p>It was -4. Plug it into your calculator using 10 for w so you can have the standard base ten.. Or just think about exponents.</p>
<p>for the tricolor cat one I think I put if the cat is not female, the cat is not tricolor...was that an answer choice? I forgot haha</p>
<p>oh yeah and the dimensions for the cake one was the cake was 12x16 inches and the aluminum foil base was extended 2 inches farther on all sides</p>
<p>I got the same answer as GPAx213 for:</p>
<p>1.503*10^n ………………………. -4</p>
<p>1.503 x 10^-4 = .0001503</p>
<p>Previous posters said it was -3?</p>
<p>The boy and parent shadow one was definitely 40.
The 1.503*10^n was -4.
The exponent one was also -4.</p>
<p>Anybody remember the answer choices for the last 5 (as in A, B, C, or D)? I hope there were some C's</p>
<p>@cosine45, the boy and parent shadow was 80, I'm 100% sure. the image wasn't drawn to scale.</p>