subject
Mathematics, 22.04.2020 07:16 math10030

A farmer has an orchard that covers an area of 40 acres. He grows apples on 25 acres, peaches on 7 acres
nectarines on 5 acres, and plums on 3 acres. The fruit trees are equally distributed within the orchard. A wees
chosen at random. Rounded to the nearest tenth of a percent, what is the theoretical probably that the trees
within the acres of apple trees?
25.0
37.5%
62.5%
75.4%

ansver
Answers: 1

Other questions on the subject: Mathematics

image
Mathematics, 21.06.2019 18:00, kezin
The sat and act tests use very different grading scales. the sat math scores follow a normal distribution with mean 518 and standard deviation of 118. the act math scores follow a normal distribution with mean 20.7 and standard deviation of 5. suppose regan scores a 754 on the math portion of the sat. how much would her sister veronica need to score on the math portion of the act to meet or beat regan's score?
Answers: 1
image
Mathematics, 21.06.2019 19:30, cmaya
The amount spent on food and drink by 20 customers is shown below what is the modal amount spent and the median amount spent? 40 25 8 36 18 15 24 27 43 9 12 19 22 34 31 20 26 19 17 28
Answers: 1
image
Mathematics, 21.06.2019 22:50, tali2561
Aclassroom is made up of 11 boys and 14 girls. the teacher has four main classroom responsibilities that she wants to hand out to four different students (one for each of the four students). if the teacher chooses 4 of the students at random, then what is the probability that the four students chosen to complete the responsibilities will be all boys?
Answers: 1
image
Mathematics, 22.06.2019 00:00, lazymarshmallow7
50 will mark show all use the linear combination method to solve the system of equations. explain each step of your solution. if steps are not explained, you will not receive credit for that step. 2x+9y= -26 -3x-7y=13
Answers: 1
You know the right answer?
A farmer has an orchard that covers an area of 40 acres. He grows apples on 25 acres, peaches on 7 a...

Questions in other subjects: