0 degrees (in Excel).
It is impossible to tell since there is no accompanying figure!
When you first enter text in a spreadsheet cell, it typically appears at a horizontal angle of 0 degrees, meaning it is straight and aligned parallel to the cell's borders. The text reads from left to right, which is standard for languages that use the Latin alphabet. This default orientation can usually be adjusted through formatting options if necessary.
[Angle] x ∏ x R2 360° The first part of the formula reads "angle divided by 360 degrees" sorry if this was unclear. R2 = Radius squared (R x R). ∏ = pi (3.1415926535...)
Use the scale which reads 0 on the line which forms one of the arms of the angle.
To be precise, as the little hand will also have moved, the answer would not be 240° for the large angle and 120° for the small angle, as some might say. The little hand will have moved 20°, so the answer would be that the large angle would be 220° and the small angle would be 140°.
It is impossible to tell since there is no accompanying figure!
[Angle] x ∏ x R2 360° The first part of the formula reads "angle divided by 360 degrees" sorry if this was unclear. R2 = Radius squared (R x R). ∏ = pi (3.1415926535...)
-10
98.6 degrees Fahrenheit is equal to a temperature of 37 degrees Celsius.
100 degrees Fahrenheit
You just draw it.
27 degrees celsius
About 24 degrees Celsius.
At -40 degrees.
Yes.
37 degrees Celsius. Use this formula to convert from Fahrenheit to Celsius: [°C] = ([°F] − 32) × 5⁄9
We'll answer your question as asked. What was asked was, "What is the sine of the angle (the angle theta) if the angle measures 0.4384?" That's the way the question reads. That's a pretty small angle. Less than one degree. That angle has about 0.00765 as the sine. Perhaps the question was "What is the angle of theta if its sine is 0.4384?" In the event that this was really your question, if sine theta equals 0.4384, arcsine theta is about 23.00 degrees. Here we use the term arcsine. If we see "arcsine 0.4384" in a text, what it means is "the angle whose sine is 0.4384" in math speak.