Let D be dogs and C be cats
<em>dogs, d, is initially five less than twice the number of cats, c</em>
D + 5 = 2C
<em>If she decides to add three more of each, the ratio of cats to dogs will be</em>
D + 8 = 2C + 3
<em>Could Bea's Pet Shop initially have 15 cats and 20 dogs?</em>
Simply plug in the numbers
20 + 5 = 2(15)
This is clearly not true: 25 does not equal 30
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Answer: 3/7 is the pocket money he spends on sweets
Step-by-step explanation:
Let the amount student spends be x
He spends 17/35x on transport and fruits
He spends 5/6 (x - 17/35x) on sweets
5/6 * (x -17/35x)
5/6 * 18/35x
= 3/7x
Tada, Its on the Image. Hoped I helped :)
Arrivals at a fast-food restaurant follow a Poisson distribution with a mean arrival rate of 16 customers per hour. In the study of statistics and probability, the Poisson distribution is a widely-used discrete probability distribution. Using the formula, it was determined that 0.0661 is the probability that in the next hour there will be exactly 12 arrivals.