True
Of course not.(-3) + (-5) = -8(3) + (-5) = -2The examples don't 'make it' false. They just demonstratethat it was always false.
False, 40 and 80 are examples of numbers ending in 0 and yet evenly divisible by 8
False: -2=3, because clearly, -2 is not 3 or else -2 would be called 3. 1/2 =5, same concept True: -2=-2 -2x=-2x x=x 1/2=.5
It is a statement that two amounts are equal; written as two numbers or expressions with an equal sign in between. For example: 1 = 1 2 = 5 x = 7 x + 4 = 20 2x = x + x x = x + 1 The first two examples illustrate that such a statement can be true or it can be false; however, they are still valid equations. The next two examples can be true or false, depending on the value assigned to the variable (letter) "x". The fifth example is always true, no matter what value you assign to "x", while the sixth example is always false.
The formula I am using is: =ROUND(IF(A6="","",IF(VLOOKUP(A6,'Pricing File '!A:N,12,FALSE)=0,(VLOOKUP(A6,'Pricing File '!A:J,8,FALSE)),(VLOOKUP(A6,'Pricing File '!A:N,12,FALSE)))),6)
No. False.
False, economists do not all agree that predatory pricing exists and is a common practice.
False, marketing includes research, product development, pricing, and customer management, not just selling and advertising.
False
False
false
False
organizations structure should include only the functions and positions needed to achieve the incident objectives is true statement
cashew nut
false
False