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Len
2 days ago
6

A wise old owl climbed up a tree whose height was exactly ninety plus three. Every day the owl climbed up 18 and every night cli

mbed down 15. On what day did the owl reach the top of the tree?
Mathematics
1 answer:
Leona [9.2K]2 days ago
6 0

Answer:

The owl reached the tree's peak on the 31st day

Step-by-step explanation:

The total height for the owl to ascend is 93 units.

If the owl ascended 18 units daily without descending, it would take 93/18 days to get to the top of the tree.

However, the owl goes down by 15 units each night, which diminishes the total distance covered by the end of each day's climb.

The net gain for the owl each day is 18-15 units = 3 units of ascent. This stable distance shows how much the owl climbs each day when considering both ascent and descent.

The duration to climb at this consistent rate of 3 units per day will be

93 units / 3 units per day = 31 days

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Y = 6 Here’s a step-by-step explanation: On the initial day of ticket sales, the school sold 3 adult tickets and 8 student tickets for a total of $72. On the following day, the school collected $152 from 7 adult tickets and 16 student tickets. What is the price of a student ticket? Day 1: 3x + 8y = 72 Day 2: 7x + 16y = 152 This leads to a system of equations. By manipulating these equations, we find: Ultimately, y = 6. If you wish to continue from this point, substituting y into the equation will give the value for x.
6 0
3 days ago
Tim was given a large bag of sweets and ate one third of the sweets before stopping as he was feeling sick. The next day he ate
Leona [9271]

Answer: Initially, he had 27 sweets.

Step-by-step explanation: The most logical approach is to work backwards from what remained after the third day to the start of the first day.

On the third day, he consumed one-third of his sweets and was left with 8. If we let the total sweets on day three be denoted as a, then one-third of a equals what he ate and the two-thirds left equals 8, giving us:

8/a = 2/3

By cross-multiplying, we find:

8 x 3 = 2a

Therefore, 24 = 2a

This leads to a = 12.

Let the sweets on day two be represented as b. If he consumed one-third of b and was left with 12, we have the same structure; hence:

12/b = 2/3

Cross-multiplying gives:

12 x 3 = 2b

So, 36 = 2b, leading to b = 18.

Denote the number of sweets on day one as x. If one-third of x was eaten and 18 remained, we can set up the equation:

18/x = 2/3

Again, cross-multiplying results in:

18 x 3 = 2x

Which simplifies to 54 = 2x, yielding x = 27.

Thus, Tim received 27 sweets at the start.

3 0
1 month ago
In year 3 it is expected that the total value of clothing sales will reach 32 million if the total value of ASCO sells Remains t
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Answer:

The sales figure for the third year is [\frac{32\ \text{mn}-x\ \text{mn}}{x\ \text{mn}}\times 100\%].

Step-by-step explanation:

Since sales data for the second year is unavailable, we denote it as x million.

Year 3's total sales amount to 32 million.

Calculate the sales account for year 3 as follows:

\text{Percentage of sales for year 3}=\frac{\text{Total Sales in year 3}-\text{Total Sales in year 2}}{\text{Total Sales in year 2}}\times 100\%

                                                =\frac{32\ \text{mn}-x\ \text{mn}}{x\ \text{mn}}\times 100\%

3 0
1 month ago
James thinks of two numbers. He says "The Highest Common Factor (HCF) of my two numbers is 3 The Lowest Common Multiple (LCM) of
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2 days ago
Mrs Atkins is going to choose two students from her class to take part in a competition.
babunello [8412]

Given:
Total girls in class = 16.
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To determine:
The various combinations for selecting one girl and one boy.
Solution:
We have,
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The total combinations for selecting one girl from 16 girls = 16.
The total combinations for selecting one boy from 14 boys = 14.
Now, the various ways to select one girl and one boy amount to:
Therefore, the total number of combinations is 224.
6 0
9 days ago
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