Yes, people can turn into mermaids, its totally possible!
10
Usually the symbol ≥ is used to represent the words "greater than or equal to." ____ The greater than symbol is > and the equal to sign is =. The less than symbol is <.
2 miles is equal to 10560 feet which makes it greater
equal to
greater than means when the # is bigger in place value. equal to means the # is the same as the other #
To graph inequalities (y is 'less than', 'greater than', 'less than or equal to', or 'greater than or equal to'), turn on the Inequality Graphing app. Do to this, press APPS and choose Inequalz. You should see the 'less than', 'greater than', 'less than or equal to', or 'greater than or equal to' symbols at the bottom of the Y= screen. To change and equals sign to one of those symbols, highlight the equals sign, press ALPHA, and then press the button directly under the sign you want to use (ALPHA TRACE for greater than, for example). To turn of Inequality Graphing, press APPS, choose Inequalz, and then choose Quit Inequal.
In an inequality, you have to shade a side of a line to see show if the possible answers are greater than or equal to it
you use a solid line when the inequality is less than or equal to or greater that or equal to the dotted line is for less than or greater than
If the inequality is > or< then it is an open circle. If it is greater than or equal to or less than or equal to, it is a closed circle.
25%. 25% of 4 is one. Add one to four, you get five. Or, if you have a graphing calculator, plug in 4(1.25)^1. It should equal 5. If you don't have a graphing calculator, just multiply 4 times .25 and see what you get. (Hint: the answer will be 5.)
If the graph is a two-dimensional plane and you are graphing an inequality, the "greater than or equal to" part will be shown by two things: (1) a solid, not a dotted, line--this part signifies the "or equal to" option--and (2) which region you shade. Shade the region that contains the points that make the inequality true. By shading that region, you are demonstrating the "greater than" part.
For the most part it can. if you have a TI-83 or better, you can use the solver under your math button. All you have to do is plug in the equation that is set to equal zero!
Equal to it 39 divided by 20 is 1.95. It is probably quicker to use a calculator than to ask on line
108 or 108.0
EDIT: Instead of doing what the person below said, you could hit [2nd] [MATH] and a screen comes up with the > and < and the ones with the line under it for greater/equal to and less/equal to______________________________________________________________You use the < and > symbols.For ti 84, you go to 'Y=' . And then where it says 'Y1' and 'Y2' down the screen, go over to the left side and press 'enter'.-For greater than, click it until you get a little black triangle pointing up-For less than, click it until you get a little black triangle pointing downFor "greater than/ less than" symbols, on the TI-84 Plus: Hit "2nd", then "MATH" for the "TEST" menu. Should be right there.
You can use the Not function or the <> operator, which is the < and the > beside each other. To see if the values in A1 and A2 are not equal to each other, you can type: =A1<>A2 or =Not(A1=A2) In each case they will either give you TRUE if they are not equal or FALSE if they are equal, in the cell that you enter the formula into.
With the equal sign (=).