The answer to this question is likely a play on words or a pun, as it does not have a straightforward mathematical or factual answer. The term "algebra with pizzazz" suggests a creative or unconventional approach to solving problems, so the answer may involve wordplay or a clever interpretation of the situation described. It is important to carefully analyze the details given in the question to come up with a witty or imaginative response.
The answer to page 7.19 in the Punchline Algebra book A is likely a math problem related to the content covered in that section. Without the specific details of the problem, it is impossible to provide an exact answer. As for the joke about the mathematician making a fruit salad, it is a play on words and not meant to have a definitive answer related to algebra or mathematics.
Think about it as with apples. If 3 people have 5 apples each, how many apples are there? 3x5 = 15. If, however, no people have 10 apples, there are no people so therefore there are no apples. Similarly, if 3 people have no apples each, there are 0 apples in total. Hope this explains it.
Let the number of apples that Jaynee's family = x. Let the number of apples that Jaynee's friends ate = x + 4
4 (apples) plus 3 (apples) = 7 (apples). 4 (cows) + 3 (cows) = 7 (cows) 4 (x2y) + 3 (x2y) = 7 (x2y)
Eat one of the apples. Then, give one apple to each person.
The answer to that riddle is "a crabapple chorus." The play on words combines "crab apples" (a type of fruit) with "chorus" for a group of singers, creating a humorous image of factory foremen enjoying their drinks and snacks while singing.
The foremen tab and apple choir.
Oh that is an easy one! The foremen tab and apple choir!
You might playfully refer to that group as a "Tab and Crab Chorus." The name captures both their beverage choice and the unique snack while highlighting their collective activity of singing. It's a fun, whimsical way to describe an unconventional gathering.
The foreman tab and apple choir
Ther is no apple factory. Apples grow on trees. Therefore that apples are natural not mechanically made.
they are the same. i have tasted both and they are excatly the same.
They are grown on trees only! Factories purchase apples from Apple orchards and make apple products from the tree grown apples.
You obviously have no idea what algebra is. the value of 1n could be anything, depending on the equation you are given. if 2n is equal to 10 what is 1n? 1n is 5. If you have 2 baskets of apples, and you have 10 apples, how many apples 1 each basket? 5!
i have always questioned this myself but it is necessary to solve everyday problems. for example: you need to split 24 apples evenly among 8 people. so you use the equation 8x = 24 to find an answer of 3 apples per person.
Sometimes you can think of things instead of letters, for example...3a + 2a = ?If that was 3 apples plus 2 apples equals ... ? then you could do it, right?3 apples + 2 apples = 5 apples3a + 2a = 5aAnd the same with MINUS...10b - 7b = ?10 bananas - 7 bananas = 3 bananas10b - 7b = 3bOf course, you can't add bananas and apples, you have to count them separately, so...3a + 4b + 7a - 2b= 3 apples + 4 bananas + 7 apples - 2 banana= 10 apples + 2 bananas= 10a +2b(You can't add these two together)After that it gets more complicated...
No. Not even a little bit. Apples, as a pomaceous fruit, do not naturally contain caffeine. They do, however, have about 19 grams of sugar for one average medium - natural sugar, which is much healthier than the 4 grams of Sweet 'N Low mixed into your daily coffee. So despite the high sugar levels, eating an apple is a much healthier alternative to drinking coffee. The sugars are also one of the main reasons apples have similar effects to caffeine.