Do you know how to find the area of a circle when you know the radius ? Good! Do that. Do you know how to find the area of a square when you know the length of the side ? Good! Do that. Now you have two numbers ... the area of the circle and the area of the square. The problem wants you to find the difference of these two numbers. Do you know how to use subtraction to find the difference of two numbers ? Good! Do that.
18, 27, 45
You will have to find the length and width, then multiply the two numbers. If you're referring to a yard as in three feet, its nine square feet.
Oh, what a happy little problem we have here! If we have three consecutive numbers, we can call them x, x+1, and x+2. When we add these together and set it equal to 175, we get 3x + 3 = 175. By solving this simple equation, we find that the three consecutive numbers are 58, 59, and 60.
just find what all numbers have in commin
Do you know how to find the area of a circle when you know the radius ? Good! Do that. Do you know how to find the area of a square when you know the length of the side ? Good! Do that. Now you have two numbers ... the area of the circle and the area of the square. The problem wants you to find the difference of these two numbers. Do you know how to use subtraction to find the difference of two numbers ? Good! Do that.
You don't. You can find the area of geometric figures, not of numbers.
18, 27, 45
Numbers are abstract concepts; they do not have areas.
You will have to find the length and width, then multiply the two numbers. If you're referring to a yard as in three feet, its nine square feet.
just find what all numbers have in commin
You have to cut the trapezoid into three shapes. The three shapes will be two triangles and one rectangle or square. You have to find the area of these three shapes and then add all of the three areas up to find the area of the trapezoid.
The problem is complete. There is enough information there for it to be solved.
divide it by three, tha area
add the three numbers the subtract 180 from your sum
The average of a group of numbers is(the sum of all the numbers in the group)/(how many numbers there are in the group)
63, 18 and 9