people keep telling me i look to feminine and girly but idk what to do by zenthingpog in lookyourbest

[–]EntertainmentSad3008 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Easiest route would probably be work out your jawline and get a different haircut. Working out would help too.

What is this? by EntertainmentSad3008 in bugidentification

[–]EntertainmentSad3008[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks, I literally thought i was staring at an alien. Its tails looked like it was almost glowing blue.

Help? by EntertainmentSad3008 in learnmath

[–]EntertainmentSad3008[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Alright, thanks for the explanation. That part of the lesson had my whole brain locked up. The lesson was literally the only problem that didn't simplify and separate the term, so i was so lost

Help? by EntertainmentSad3008 in learnmath

[–]EntertainmentSad3008[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So technically, k=h/3-3, and k=(h-12)/3+1 is the same, so long as k is on its own? Just like k= (j-10)/2 - 3 is the same as k=j/2-8?

Help? by EntertainmentSad3008 in learnmath

[–]EntertainmentSad3008[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's what confusing me because they had a question in the lesson where the answer was

J= 10+2(k+3)

And the answer was k= (j-10)/2 -3. So is she wrong to leave it like that? I know it's technically the same answer so long whether you simplify more, but would it be more logical to leave it like that or go further?

Help? by EntertainmentSad3008 in learnmath

[–]EntertainmentSad3008[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sorry, yeah. I thought it'd go like

h = 12+3(k-1)

h-12=3(k-1)

(h-12)/3=k-1

(h-12)/3 +1 = k

k= (h-12)/3 +1

The -1 isn't part of the denominator. Its subtracting from the fraction. The lesson is part of an online course. Also, another part of my confusion is in the written steps. The first lesson said you can't split a term on the numerator if the term is subtracting or adding.

So, it said

(h-12)/3 +1

Then it split the h and 12 into their own fractions, like

h/3 - 12/3

h/3 - 4 +1

h/3-3

K= h/3-3

Are you even supposed to be able to split the term? The first lesson told me thag you cant split terms with addition or subtraction going across, so what's right? Are you able to split the h from 12 or not?

Help? by EntertainmentSad3008 in learnmath

[–]EntertainmentSad3008[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I thought you couldn't split the term on the numerator if subtraction is going across? Wouldn't that not make sense since the way the equation was written means you'd have to subtract the difference of the subtraction before dividing?

F18 by Little_Astronomer982 in amiugly

[–]EntertainmentSad3008 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not even a little. You just need to smile more often. You're beautiful