A cubic centimetre is a measure of volume. There is nothing to solve.
Suppose the supplement of the angle is x degrees. Then the angle is 180 - x degrees. Therefore the complement of the angle is 90 - (180 - x) degrees = x - 90 degrees. So 5*(x - 90) - 2*x = 40 Solve the above equation for x.
solve it
If you solve such an equation for "y", you get an equation in the slope-intercept form.
you can only solve for one in an equation so it can equal something
A cubic centimetre is a measure of volume. There is nothing to solve.
You can solve by substituting (x) for the unknown angle and (x + 40) for the angle plus 40 degrees and set the equation as: x + (x + 40) = 90 (then simplify) 2x + 40 = 90 (then isolate the known from unknown by subtracting 40 from each side of the equation) 2x = 50 (divide both sides by 2 to solve for x) x (the unknown angle) = 25 degrees now you can substitute the value of the angles to prove the equation.
Sure. You can always 'solve for' a variable, and if it happens to be the only variable in the equation, than that's how you solve the equation.
you don't answer an equation, you solve an equation
Suppose the supplement of the angle is x degrees. Then the angle is 180 - x degrees. Therefore the complement of the angle is 90 - (180 - x) degrees = x - 90 degrees. So 5*(x - 90) - 2*x = 40 Solve the above equation for x.
solve it
If you solve such an equation for "y", you get an equation in the slope-intercept form.
Well if it has 180 degrees over all, and the two base angles have to be congruent, then the equation is 180-120=2x or each base angle is 30 degrees.
It is not an equation if it does not have an equals sign. You could simplify it but not solve it.
How do you use division to solve a multiplication equation?Answer this question…
you can only solve for one in an equation so it can equal something
There is no such thing as "solving integers". You can solve an equation, which means finding all the unknowns in that equation, but you can't solve an integer.