Well, honey, to find the radius when the angle is 150 degrees and the arc length is 330 cm, you use the formula: radius = (arc length * 180) / (pi * angle). Plug in the numbers and you'll get your radius. Just don't expect me to hold your hand through it, you can handle this on your own.
It will take nine 330 by 330 mm tiles to cover one square meter. The room is 144 square meters in area. 9X144=1296 tiles. With a 5mm grout.
An acre has a total of 43,560 square feet. You divide the number of square feet by that and you get the number of acres. This gives you an answer of 2.5 acres.
It is: 330 feet
49
Since a circle is 360 degrees, negative 330 will look like positive 30, the difference between any two numbers on a clock face.
Think of the old fashioned analog clock at 1 o'clock. Now think of the angle between the hour hand and the minute hand. Not the little angle but the one that goes all the way from 1 through 6 to 12. That angle is 330 degrees.
330,000,000
330 degrees
Oh, dude, rounding 330 to the nearest thousand? That's like asking me to pick the most exciting flavor of plain yogurt. Anyway, if we're gonna play this game, 330 rounded to the nearest thousand is 0. Because, like, 330 is already in the hundreds place, so it's not gonna change when we look at the thousands place. So, yeah, 330 stays as 330 when rounded to the nearest thousand.
If you think of two lines creating an angle of 30 degress. such as a slice of pie, the angle from the outside of one line around to the outside of the other line, or where the rest of the pie would be would be 330 degrees. If you understand that and are just lookin for the tern used for 330 degrees this is REFLEX. A reflex angle is from 180 degrees to 360 degrees. with angles <90degrees being ACUTE and angles >90 degrees <180 degrees called OBTUSE
Yes. Sometimes in mathematics, it is useful to have negative angles. You can increase or decrease an angle by 360 degrees (or 2*pi radians) without changing the characteristics of the angle. Thus, for example, an angle of 30 degrees is equivalent to an angle of -330 degrees.
Any angle can be coterminal.
Assuming you mean the angle of the hands of a clock set at 11. the smaller angle would be 30 degrees, and the larger would be 330 degrees.
Assuming that means degrees, that's the same as -30 degrees. The sine of -30 degrees is exactly -0.5, the cosine is +root(3)/2, or about 0.866. You can deduce the remaining trigonometric functions from these; for example, tan(x) = sin(x) / cos(x).
330
A huge stack of paper, 330 feet tall that weighs 2200 pounds.