I'm pretty sure that only the amount of your salary that goes beyond the previous bracket is taxed at the higher percentage.
the answer is e raise to power minus pi/2
43 * 24 * 7 * 4 * 22 * 72 . 64 * 16 * 7 * 4 * 4 * 49 = 5619712
1 calorie is defined as the amount of energy needed to raise the temperature of 1 gram of water by 1C, so... It takes 8.1 calories to raise your 8.1 grams by 1C, but you need to raise it 20C. 8.1*20=162. 162 calories is the answer you are looking for.
The definition of the natural log ln of a number is the power that you have to raise e to in order to get that number. Therefore, ln(2x+3) is the power you have to raise e to to get 2x + 3.
It takes 1 calorie to raise 1 g of water 1 degrees. Sooo... 75 - 25 = 50 degrees 50 x 10 = 500 calories or 5.00 x 10E2
16.800 salary with a 5% raise? what was the salary for last years?
It can raise a paersons salary by over 8% - 20%
#include<iostream> #include<iomanip> #include<limits.h> int main() { using std::cout; using std::fixed; using std::setw; using std::endl; double salary=12345.67; cout.precision(2); cout<<"Old salary:\t$"<<fixed<<setw(8)<<salary<<endl; // 2% 2.0) double raise=salary*2.0; // Round up or down as appropriate raise=(raise-floor(raise))>=0.5?ceil(raise):floor(raise); // Scale back by 100 raise/=100; cout<<"2% raise:\t$"<<fixed<<setw(8)<<raise<<endl; salary+=raise; cout<<"New salary:\t$"<<fixed<<setw(8)<<salary<<endl; }
No. The president does not set anybody's salary. Congress does that.
900/18000 = .05 --- thus her raise is 5%
No
Curtis current annual salary is17560 he will be receiving a 5 percent pay raise wht will his new salary be?
3% raise is the same as multiplying your previous salary by a factor of 1.03 ("1" for the original salary, and "0.03" for the 3% raise).
Something you do to your children. Something your boss does not do to you salary. Something you do to the roof in the club.
yes
That depends on your base salary. The amount of the raise will be 0.025 times the base. The new salary will be 1.025 times the base.
A salary that increases to two-and-a-half times its earlier value.