Absolutely not
It is not possible to answer the question without any information on what a, b and c are.
Transitive Property (mathematics), property of a mathematical relation such that if the relation holds between a and b and between b and c, then it also exists between a and c. The equality relation, for example, is transitive because if a = b and b = c, then a = c. Other transitive relations include greater than (>), less than (<), greater than or equal to (?), and less than or equal to (?).
Correct.
a is 6 less than d.
a < b < c So, neither a nor b is greater than c.
False. A is greater than C. ******************** I'm not in calculus but if A isn't less than B, then that means its either greater than or equal to it. and if B isn't less than C then its greater or equal to. so that means that A is either greater than or equal to C. so that means that A than C.
Absolutely not
A is greater than B (A>B). C is less than D (C<D). But what about "less than or equal"?
It is not possible to answer the question without any information on what a, b and c are.
You already said the answer that b is less than c
Yes because A > B, B > C, so A has to be > C.ExampleA=5B=3C=1A (5) > B (3)B (3) > C (1)A (5) > C (1)
Transitive Property (mathematics), property of a mathematical relation such that if the relation holds between a and b and between b and c, then it also exists between a and c. The equality relation, for example, is transitive because if a = b and b = c, then a = c. Other transitive relations include greater than (>), less than (<), greater than or equal to (?), and less than or equal to (?).
16
Correct.
Oh, dude, let's break this down. So, if number A is 4676, then number B is 10043 + 4676, which is like basic addition, right? And then number C is 2610 less than B, so you just subtract that from B. Add A, B, and C together, and you've got the total value. Math, man, it's wild.
4