There is no sensible answer to this question. A millimetre is a measure of length, with dimensions [L]. A degree is a measure of angulatr displacement or temperature [unspecified], with some other dimensions. Basic dimensional analysis teaches that you cannot combine measures with different dimensions.
-5
5 < xactually my math teacher would dissagree X-5
1200 g is roughly 2.64 pounds, so it is less than than 5 pounds.
Product of 6 and 5 is 30. 30 is 19 less than 49
It is: x-5
An angle of 5 degrees is an acute angle because it is greater than 0 but less than 90 degrees
By definition, ANY substance which has a temperature of less than 0 degrees is not greater than 5 degrees. Your question may need to be re-stated or clarified.
think of it this way, 1 degree less is 0 and 4 degrees less than that is -4 so that is the answer -4 degrees
A 5 degree angle is an acute angle because it is greater than 0 but less than 90 degrees.
56 degrees is an acute angle becuase it is greater than 0 but less than 90 degrees
It is an acute angle because it's greater than 0 but less than 90 degrees
Assuming that degrese is you fail at spelling degreese and that celceus is a fail for Celsius, 6 degrees less than 2 degrees Celsius is four degrees Celsius below zero.
x = 2y - 5
5 °C - 10 °C = -5 °C (i.e. 5 degrees Celsius below 0 °C or 5 °C below freezing)
A 5 degree angle is called an acute angle. Any angle less than 90 degrees is acute.
approximately 5 degrees less than its melting point
-5 is greater than -10 For real numbers, the definition of "less than" can be expressed as "is to the left on the number line". Because -10 is to the left of -5, -10 is considered to be less than -5. It helps to think of temperature: Temperature measures heat, so if it's -10 degrees outside, that's colder than -5; I.e. there's less heat.