If the grain of rice is put on the first square,2 grains of rice on the second square 4 grains of rice in the thirds square 8 grains of rice on the fourth square ect. (Doubling each time) how many grains of rice would be on the last square?represent your answer first in exponential from.use a table below to help solve the problem

Answers

Answer 1
Answer: Sorry, we need to be able to see the table or know how many squares there are in total! I can't help you!

Answer 2
Answer: we need to see the or the amout of squares to help you

Related Questions

Why do you think gardner chooses not to name beowulf
A married woman named Eva Dansk.What is the word in this sentence that needs to be abbreviated (examples: Wednesday abbreviation is Wed.)
There were 276 people on an airplane write a number greater than 276
Which answer choice does not contain any punctuation errors? a. A hummingbird, "Shawna said," must be an upholsterer. b. She added "that hummingbirds pad their nests with moss." c. "Orioles, announced Antonio, are master weavers." d. Mary continued, "Robins plaster the insides of their nests with mud."
My number has 2 hundreds the tens digit is 9 more than the ones digit

In March 1936, Lange was driving home to San Francisco after completing a job. Along the way, she passed a crude sign announcing PEA-PICKERS CAMP. . . . Leaving her car, Lange saw a mother seated in a canvas lean-to with a baby in her arms and two other children huddled around her. The woman seemed stunned and despairing over her family's plight. Lange told what happened next:I saw and approached the hungry and desperate mother, as if drawn by a magnet. I do not remember how I explained my presence or my camera to her, but I do remember she asked me no questions. . . . I did not ask her name or history. She told me her age, that she was thirty-two. She said that they had been living on frozen vegetables from the surrounding fields, and birds that the children had killed. She had just sold the tires from her car to buy food. There she sat in that lean-to tent with her children huddled around her, and seemed to know that my pictures might help her, and so she helped me. There was a sort of equality about it.
–Years of Dust: The Story of the Dust Bowl,
Albert Marrin
Choose the word or phrase that best completes each part of the outline for the passage.
Topic:

1. Main idea:

a. Key detail:

Answers

Answer:

Topic: Dorothea

Main Idea: Dorothea Lange went to worker's camp

Key Detail: She photograph her mother

Explanation:

Answer:

Topic: Dorothea

Main Idea: Dorothea Lange went to worker's camp

Key Detail: She photograph her mother

Explanation:

I took the quiz and it was correct. Good luck :)

Read the excerpt from the General Prolgue to the Canterbury Tales.She used to wipe her upper lip so clean,
No print of grease inside her cup was seen,
Not the least speck, when she had drunk from it.
Most daintily she’d reach for what she ate.
No question, she possessed the greatest charm,
Her demeanor was so pleasant, and so warm;
Though at pains to ape the manners of the court,
And be dignified, in order to be thought
A person well deserving of esteem.
But, speaking of her sensibility,
She was so full of charity and pity
That if she saw a mouse caught in a trap,
And it was dead or bleeding, she would weep.
Which of the underlined words best help the reader understand what the nun is like? Check all that apply.
daintily
greatest charm
pleasant
speaking
dead or bleeding

Answers

The correct option is C. Pleasant of the underlined words best helps the reader understand what the nun is like.

What is the importance of the General Prologue in The Canterbury Tales?

The Canterbury Tales prologue is crucial because it demonstrated the social stratification of medieval England. Chaucer employs the literary style known as an estates satire, in which the author explains, analyzes, and portrays how the social order functions while also criticizing or making fun of it.

The General Prologue begins with a description of spring's reemergence from winter. He talks about the April rains, the emerging foliage and flowers, and the conversing birds. The narrator claims that people start to feel the urge to embark on a pilgrimage around this time of year.

The right answer is C. The reader can best grasp what the nun is like from the underlined phrases pleasant.

Learn more about the Canterbury Tales here:

brainly.com/question/3872198

#SPJ2

Answer:

Pleasant

Explanation:

Which word in the sentence is the indirect object? After the show, the performers made themselves a delicious dinner.  A.themselves  B.dinner  C.performers  D.show

Answers

The answer it's variant A.themselves because it's an indirect object in dative case
When you clear away all the ornaments, decorations, and cobwebs,
the sentence says  "Performers made dinner."

Subject = performers
Predicate = made
Direct Object = dinner.

An indirect object in a sentence is quite rare.  If there is one, then it's
who or what gets the direct object.  In this sentence, "themselves"
get the dinner, so "themselves" is the indirect object.

The story is basketball blues

Answers

Answer:

need to see the passge

to help u

Explanation:

Answer:

This question says to read the passage.

There is no passage provided.

Please re-post this with the passage.

you can add more that 1 attachment.

Explanation:

a car moving at 50miles per hour speeds up steadily to 70miles per hour over a period of. 30minutes.How far did it. travel during the 30-minute period of acceleration?

Answers


so u would answer it like this car =50MILES PER HOUR AND IN 30 MINUTES    SPEEDS UP = 70 MPH U WANT TO FIND OUT IN THE 30 MINUTES HOW DID IT GO TO 50 TO 70 SO YOU   50+?=70

40 points. Read this excerpt from Thomas Paine's essay "Common Sense":Mankind being originally equals in the order of creation, the equality could only be destroyed by some subsequent circumstance; the
distinctions of rich, and poor, may in a great measure be accounted for, and that without having recourse to the harsh, ill-sounding
names of oppression and avarice? Oppression is often the CONSEQUENCE, but seldom or never the MEANS3 of riches; and though
avarice will preserve a man from being necessitously poor, it generally makes him too timorous to be wealthy.
But there is another and greater distinction, for which no truly natural or religious reason can be assigned, and that is, the distinction of
men into KINGS and SUBJECTS. Male and female are the distinctions of nature, good and bad the distinctions of heaven; but how a race
of men came into the world so exalted above the rest, and distinguished like some new species, is worth inquiring into, and whether they
are the means of happiness or of misery to mankind.
1. recourse source of help
2. avarice greed
3. means method for accomplishing or obtaining something
4. timorous fearful
What argument is Thomas Paine trying to make in this excerpt?
OA. The differences between the kings and the subjects are not natural or necessary.
OB. There will always be a need to separate kings and their subjects.
OC. The equality originally enjoyed by people has been damaged by natural disasters.
OD. Not all people who belonged to the upper levels of society are cruel.

Answers

To be honest I would say four which is od

Other Questions