<u>Events</u> A and B are called <u>independent</u>, when

otherwise events A and B are <u>dependent</u>.
The events A, B and A∩B are:
- A - Jane will go to a ballgame on Monday;
- B - Kate will go to a ballgame on Monday;
- A∩B - Kate and Jane both go to the ballgame on Monday.

Answer: events A and B are dependent
Answer:
C) 0.880
B) 0.075
Step-by-step explanation:
If the professor forgets to set the alarm
Probability = 0.1,
Wakes up in time probability = 0.25.
If the professor sets the alarm
Probability = 1 - 0.1 = 0.9
Wake up in time probability = 0.95.
A.)
The probability that professor Moore wakes up in time to make his first class tomorrow
Probability = ( Forgets to set alarm probability x Wakes up in time )+ ( Sets the alarm probability x Wakes up in time ) = ( 0.1 x 0.25 ) + ( 0.9 + 0.95 ) = 0.88
B.)
Late in the class
Set the Alarm Probability = 0.1
Wakes up late probability = 1 - 0.25 = 0.75
Professor Sets the alarm probability = Set the Alarm Probability x Wakes up late probability = 0.1 x 0.75 = 0.075
This is how we solved and make the equation.
Stock A = 100
Stock B = 45
For the past months, his stocks inversely decreased.
Stock A = m cents / share
Stock B = n cents * share
So the equation is
= 100 (0.01m) + 45 (0.01n)
<span>= m + 0.45n</span>