ramiro is 3/10 as tall as the flagpole. the flagpole is 5/9 as tall asa nearby tree.the tree is 32 2/5 feet tall. how tall is rammiro

Answers

Answer 1
Answer: Tree height: 32 2/5
Flagpole: 5/9 * 32 2/5
Ramiro: 3/10 * Flagpole

5/9 * 32 2/5 =
= 5/9 * 162/5 =
= 1/9 * 162/1 =
= 1/1 * 18/1 =
= 1 * 18 =
= 18 [feet]

So the flagpole is 18 feet tall. Ramiro is 3/10 of its height, so:

3/10 * 18 =
= 54/10 =
= 5 4/10 =
= 5 2/5

Answer: Ramiro is 5 2/5 feet tall.


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Answers

d. direct object

Direct objects are words or set of words or phrases that are directly or is in contact immediate to its describer, either a noun pronoun adjective or adverb.
For example, 
1.A. Direct Object 
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It's D the direct object i have seen question before it's actually pretty easy if you think about it for a minute

Which verb correctly completes the sentence? The pack of wolves __________ loudly after sunset. A. howls B. howl

Answers

Answer:

A. howls

Explanation:

The verb "howl" in this sentence has to be in agreement with the word "pack" and not with the word "wolves", because the phrase says that one (1) pack of wolves howled, in this case "one pack" this in the singular, then the verb has to be in the singular also, in this case, the right alternative is "howls".

A. "howls" is correct. These can be confusing, because if it were just "wolves" it would be "howl", but since it's a "pack", which is singular, it's "howls". Try saying it out loud.

What is (2x66)^56x20^y3 solve it plz right not a fake answer

Answers

Answer:

uummm that cant be solved and stop trying to be meeeee just take the points

Explanation:

Answer:

wasted

Explanation:

Which sentence contains an adjective clause?a. Unfortunately, the puppy just didn't know any better.
b. Because we had run out of tape, we couldn't repair the pages of Billy's favorite book.
c. Billy couldn't believe his eyes when he walked into his room and saw chewed-up paper everywhere.
d. The new puppy, which Mom and Dad gave Billy just last week, chewed up half of Chapter 15 in his favorite book.

Answers

d.) the new puppy, which Mom and Dad gave Billy just last week, chewed up half of Chapter 15 in his favorite book. 

the adjective clause is "which Mom and Dad gave Billy just last week"

How is the underlined gerund phrase used in the sentence? People watched the clown's juggling on the corner. A. subject B. predicate nominative C. direct object D. object of a preposition

Answers

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Hope that helps!

The concern with getting daughters married into good families pervades Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice and forms a large part of the social mannerisms that the novel mocks. In which lines in this excerpt does one of the Bennet parents make an ironically false claim about having gone to great lengths to achieve that goal?

Answers

The concern with getting daughters married into good families pervades Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice and forms a large part of the social mannerisms that the novel mocks. The lines in this excerpt that one of the Bennet parents make an ironically false claim about having gone to great lengths to achieve that goal is to be present in almost every party the Bingley and Darcy proposes.

Answer:

The theme of marriage is prevailing in the novel "Pride and Prejudice;" a novel by Jane Austen.

Explanation:

From the very beginning of the novel this theme was depicted to the reader,

"It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife..."

Though the topic of marriage is serious one, but the author had in an ironical manner portrayed the views of marriage that society have towards it. It is considered a business deal between the two families rather than love being the factor for the marriage.

As other parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bennet are also concerned about the marriage of their five daughters. (Though it is only Mrs. Bennet who makes much of the effort for the same, Mr.s Bennet just sits down in his library.)

The lines in which we get the glimpse of ironical false claim of Mrs. Bennet going to length to achieve the goal of successful marriage of their daughters is found in the last Chapter of the book (61) and first few lines, quoted below,

"HAPPY for all her maternal feelings was the day on which Mrs. Bennet got rid of her two most deserving daughters. With what delighted pride she afterwards visited Mrs. Bingley, and talked of Mrs. Darcy, may be guessed. I wish I could say, for the sake of her family, that the accomplishment of her earnest desire in the establishment of so many of her children produced so happy an effect as to make her a sensible, amiable, well-informed woman for the rest of her life; though perhaps it was lucky for her husband, who might not have relished domestic felicity in so unusual a form, that she still was occasionally nervous and invariably silly."