It makes no difference in which order you mutliply these. You must calculate 15 squared first though.
E.G. 1 * 22 * 3 is the same as, for instance, 22 * 3 * 1.
because when you find the volume of a rectangular prism you basically get the area of the base and multiply it by its height and for the cylinder the area of its base = pi(r^2) which you then multiply by its height to give you its volume no way in hell am i explaing to you the calculus and limit stand point of this >_>; sorry
9 squared is another way of stating the equation 9 X 9, and 10 squared is another way of stating the equation 10 X 10. Find the answers to these equations, add them together, and you will have the answer.
the fraction times itself e.g. 1/2 squared would be 1/2 * 1/2 or 1/4 in decimal it works the same way .5 squared = .5 * .5 = .25
60,000 An easy way to find this is to simply add 3 zeros to 60 since 1000 is a a power of ten. If you want to multiply 60 by .1 you would just take away a zero and get 6, or if you wanted to multiply 60 by 10 you would add 1 zero to get 600, or if you wanted to multiply 60 by 100 you would add 2 zeros to get 6000, and so on.
A squared plus B squared equals C squared, where C is the hypotenuse of a right triangle and A and B are the other two sides is true and is one way of expressing the Pythagorean Theorem.
No way buddy, the result is zero.
No. The correct way is, "You would not have mindedit."
The same way in which you would multiply any two numbers.
No, "she and you" is not correct. The correct way to phrase it would be "she and you."
No, the correct grammar would be "I hate you the way you hate me."
The correct way to ask that question would be: "From whom was it?"
The correct way to phrase this question in English would be: "Are these correct?"
No, the grammatically correct sentence would be: "I am annoyed by the way you behave."
No, it is not correct. The correct way to phrase it would be "Thank you to all of you."
No, "hows you" is not correct grammar. The correct way to ask that question would be "How are you?" or "How are you doing?"
Perhaps if you would phrase the question the correct understandable way I could answer it the correct understandable way:)
No. The correct way to say that you disagree with something would be "in disagreement."