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There Is Two Question Here

Here is the question.?

The monthly income of two persons are in the ratio 4:5 and their monthly expenditures are in the ratio 7:9. If each saves rs. 50 per month, find their monthly incomes.

Got a question here about epispadia..?

actually, i have two questions about it and it has been bugging my mind recently.

1. in the anatomic position, are all that we see anteriorly are the ventral part? and of course, penis is not erect in that position!!

2. how come in epispadia, which means the urethral opening is in the "dorsal" part, the opening is in that dorsal part which should be "ventral" as we see in the anatomic position?

thanks very much!

Any New Trick Questions Out There?

Hello everyone.

I love trick questions, so here's a challange for you all. Give me a trick question I haven't heard before. First person to do that will get the 10 points.

Now by trick question, here's two examples of what I mean.

If a rooster lays an egg on the top of an A frame house, which way would the egg roll? (Answer: Roosters don't lay eggs.)

If a plane crashes on the US - Canada border, where do they bury the survivors? (Answer: You don't bury survivers.)

Those two are very old ones, but they are perfect examples of what I consider trick questions. Can you come up with any new ones? First one I see that I haven't heard before get's the points!

Thanks,
Robbie

Can someone help me with these two science lab questions?

These bands of muscle work in opposition to each other; one extends the wing when it contracts, the other folds the wing when it contracts. Think about your biceps and triceps muscles in your upper arm. Contract the triceps muscles, and it straightens out your arm. Contract the biceps, and it folds your arm. You have similar antagonistic muscle groups in your forearm that can extend or 'fold' your hand in relation to your forearm. In your thigh, its quads and hams. etc. etc. etc. Muscles are often arranged in antagonistic groups like this, so as to move joints in two directions.

Can anyone help me with these two biology questions?

Well since this is your homework and your education i'll help but not directly answer. Ok, the first means explain how the human body works as it's own sort of miniature community. How all the cells work together and millions of organisms create one larger organism. The human body.

For more info on this look at this article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biological_community

The second is bit more hard. Ok, biometrics is the process of distinguishing humans from another. Such as fingerprint scanners, DNA, genetics, etc. Two definitions can be instinct such as smell, visual and technology biometrics such as like i said, Fingerprint scanners DNA etc.

This should help: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biometrics

How do I undo the merging (unmerge) of two questions on Quora?

Dear Nico Monetti — and now Tom Musgrove, and Robert Shaus,By the time I started to answer your (Nico’s) question, it had been merged with another similar one. I noticed that real people, not Quora, had merged a bunch of similar questions into this one.Note that “your” questions are not yours. Quora owns any questions we post. (However, we own our answers.) Questions that are merged incorrectly can be undone.However, in this case, at least the two (or three or more) questions basically mean the same thing, although yours is a little more specific about the new question changing the meaning. Here is your original question:To undo a merge, just go into the edit log of the question. Click “Revert,” and offer an explanation of why the two questions should be kept separate. Wishing you the best in this effort! (Sometimes, I have actually had success making these appeals.)PRO TIP: It helps if your question really is different from others.OFFICIAL QUORA SOURCESWhat's Quora's policy on merging questions?What is the policy on merging questions that differ in the question details?What's Quora's policy on merging questions that contain multiple questions?Redirect Hell: https://redirectme.quora.com/—Sarah M., 6 Sept. 2018 (updated 23 March 2019)MERGED INTO: How do I undo the merging (unmerge) of two questions on Quora?ORIGINAL QUESTION: Is there a way to undo a Quora Content Review question merge? The merger changed the meaning of my question and I want the original restored.

Why is it impossible to ask your first question here?

It isn’t.Since you have asked this question then eitherit is your first question and hence it is demonstrated as possibleit isn’t your first questions which means there are previously questions, one of which must be first, so again it is demonstrated.Unless of course you meanWhy is it impossible that this is the place that your first question is askedAnd that might because first question tend to preceded adoption of technology.

I have asked three questions here and never received an answer. What am I doing wrong?

You did ask three questions before this one.One was asked on 3 Aug 2016 What are your views on providing adequate health care for uninsured individuals or individuals with orphan diseases (which tend to be uninsured)? No one is following that question, including you. That could be that something went wrong when you asked the question. Question askers are supposed to automatically follow the question. Or it could be that you unfollowed it later.One of the other two questions still exist, too, but apparently you removed the third question the day after you asked it.

I'm really struggling on these algebra questions, here's another example of factoring special polynomial cases?

This is the polynomial of a perfect square..

x^2 + 6x + 9 is one, and usually the pattern your book might show you.

Here's how it works:

The coeff of the x^2 ADDED to the coeff of the real number, 180,= the middle term....remember foil.

The answer to this one is (x + 3)( x + 3) 3x + 3x = 6x, but 3 x3=9

Since in math we think that the use of lots of lead from your pencil means it could be simplified, rather than write it twice, the entire term is just written as a square...
(x + 3)^2

see, we don't write yy, we write y^2 . So if you were to write (x+3) = y, you could see that you indeed had yy.

Back to that one that you listed giving you a problem

The square root of 100 is 10,

the square root of 81 is 9

When you factored that, you got:
(10x + 9)(10x +9)

The first 10x multiplied by that last 9 = 90x

The first 9, multiplied by that second 10x as well = 90 x

When you add them up, you get 180 x, your middle term in that original trinomial.

Sooooooooo rather that write that (10x+9) twice, you write it once with a little 2 as the exponent. It is like the y that I showed you in the x^2+6x+9.

Helpful?

It's a pattern, that you just memorize. You'll find it in your book under Trinomial Squares.

Edit::::::The ones above mine aren't very helpful... so if you get stuck again, I'm here another hour.

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