answersLogoWhite

0


Want this question answered?

Be notified when an answer is posted

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: Which proportion could be used to find the value of n for the following problem155 of 85 in n?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

What is direct and indirect proportion?

Direct Proportion-As one of the value increases,so does the other. Indirect Proportion-As one value increases,the other decreases. ~Hannah^^


What is the definition of percent proportion?

It is the value which represents the proportion as a part of 100.


Can proportion be nagative value?

No. A proportion is the relationship of one part of something to the whole thing. If X is a fifth of Y, this must be a positive value.


Can proportion be a negative value?

Yes.


Kinds of proportion?

1. Direct Proportion As one value increases, so does the other. 2. Indirect Proportion As one value increases, the other decreases. 3. Partitive Proportion A proportion describing the total amount being distributed into two or more unequal parts. Miwa D. Oguro


What proportion of sample proportions have a value greater than the population in any normal sample proportion distribution?

A half.


Of taxes in proportion to the value of the goods taxed?

Ad Valorem


Which proportion can be used to determine the value of x?

8/10


What is the name for taxes in proportion to the value of goods?

ad valorem


How do you make a propotion?

Depends what kind of proportion you want to make and for what, could be percentages or to figure out the missing value in a side of one figure similar to another, etc


If you throw exactly two heads in two tosses of a coin you win 81 dollars if notyou pay 24 dollars what is the expected value of proportion?

The answer depends on what proportion you want the expected value for.


What is the tiniest proportion of the universe?

If it can be presumed from the use of "of the universe" that the question is not a complete mathematical or philosophical abstraction such as "zero to nonzero" or "any nonzero value to infinite value" but applies to some physical constant, one could derive a concrete result in a proportion by selecting something measurable, for example, length. The tiniest proportion of the universe in this context would involve Planck length, which could be expressed as a value resulting in a proportionality constant - in this case (perhaps, again as implied by the question), with another defined length, for example the maximum length conceivable within the physical constraints of the universe. Planck length could in this way be used in a coordinate system as an expression of a length proportion. By its nature, fractions of the distance described by Planck length (about 10^-35m) are not taken as meaningful, so it would be the 'tiniest.'