Honors Program Credit – Accounting I Chapter 1 Hal Burton began a Web Consulting practice and completed these transactions during September of the current year: Sept. 1 Invested $100‚000 of his personal savings into a checking account opened in the name of the business. 2 Rented office space and paid $1‚200 cash for the month of September. 3 Purchased office equipment for $30‚000‚ paying $8‚000 cash and agreeing to pay the balance in one year. 4 Purchased office supplies for $750 cash. 8
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ECN601 – Section 003 Syracuse University Fall 2010 Professor Lourenço Paz Math Review 1. Basic algebra and geometry Check out the handouts at : http://www1.maxwell.syr.edu/pa.aspx?id=36507223186 2. Calculus of one variable Let y = axb‚ where a and b are numbers‚ with b different from zero. The derivative of y with respect to x is dy/dx = abxb-1 Examples: y = 2x7‚ dy/dx = 2*7x7-1 = 14x6 y = 5x0.3‚ dy/dx = 5*0.3*x0.3-1 = 1.5x-0.7 Exercises: Calculate dy/dx a) y= 3x2 b) y = 12x0
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at an undergraduate level by business students at University. These courses are slightly less difficult and do not always go into the same depth as other mathematics courses for people majoring in mathematics or science fields. The two most common math courses taken in this form are Business Calculus and Business Statistics. Examples used for problems in these courses are usually real-life problems from the business world to help students gain a more detailed understanding. An example of the differences
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The Great Math Tattle Battle is written by Anne Bowen and illustrated by Jamie Zollars in a fictional way. It starts off with one of the main characters‚ Harley Harrison being the best math student in the second grade. Throughout the story he keeps writing notes to his teacher‚ Mr. Hall‚ tattling on other students. He does this in an unusual way. Within his notes he uses math problems‚ usually addition. For example he tells on one of the other students and says he steals different amounts of erasers
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Percent: Percent to fraction: x% = x/100 Percentage formula: Rate/100 = Percentage/base Rate: The percent. Base: The amount you are taking the percent of. Percentage: The answer obtained by multiplying the base by the rate Consumer math formulas: Discount = list price × discount rate Sale price = list price − discount Discount rate = discount ÷ list price Sales tax = price of item × tax rate Interest = principal × rate of interest × time Tips = cost of meals × tip
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Pre-Calculus and Trig/Pre-Calculus Writing Assignment As a part of our math course we have been assigned a writing piece in which we are required to discuss the properties and uses of several kinds of algebraic functions. The four models include‚ linear‚ exponential‚ power‚ and inverse power. The purpose of this assignment is to review our understanding of these models and their uses and to fulfill a writing piece for the MEAP test. The first and simplest function to be discussed is the linear function
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shot (This American Life part one 0:01:08-0:01:30). Can the “culture of honor” thesis explain the problem with gun assaults that this high school faces? This essay will answer that question by examining the culture of honor thesis‚ including aspects of a study conducted to reflect the theory. However‚ the extent of violence faced by those in the Harper High School community does not entirely correlate with the culture of honor
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Part A Q2-Maths Assignment 2012‚ Mrs Pillai Lvl 1 Irrational numbers are numbers that are neither whole numbers nor ratios of whole numbers. Irrational numbers are real numbers in the sense that they appear in measurements of geometric objects--for example‚ the number pi (II). However‚ irrational numbers cannot be represented as decimals‚ unlike rational numbers‚ which can be expressed either as finite decimals or as infinite decimals that eventually follow a repeating pattern. By contrast‚ irrational
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When I grow up I want to be a restaurant owner/ chef. I can think of many reasons to use math while owning a restaurant. First of‚ I would have to count the money I make. Then I would have to add up all the expenses my restaurant has like water‚ gas‚ and electricity. Next‚ I would have to take inventory‚ which is counting how many items I’ve sold compared to the amount of money I’ve made compared to the amount of that item I have left. I also have to count all the food I have left over that way
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Math IA Math Internal Assessment EF International Academy NY Student Name: Joo Hwan Kim Teacher: Ms. Gueye Date: March 16th 2012 Contents Introduction Part A Part B Conclusion Introduction The aim of this IA is to find out the pattern of the equations with complex numbers by using our knowledge. I used de Moivre’s theorem and binomial expansion‚ to find out the specific pattern and make conjecture about it. I basically used property of binominal theory with the relationship between the
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