Math, asked by shamelhembrom5305, 8 months ago

a line is of the length 5 and one endis at the point (1, -2)if the abscissa of the other end is 4 prove that its ordinate must be 2or -6​

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Answered by tahyamkonyak6
0

Answer:

a line is of the length 5 and one endis at the point (1, -2)if the abscissa of the other end is 4 prove that its ordinate must be 2or -6

a line is of the length 5 and one endis at the point (1, -2)if the abscissa of the other end is 4 prove that its ordinate must be 2or -6

Step-by-step explanation:

a line is of the length 5 and one endis at the point (1, -2)if the abscissa of the other end is 4 prove that its ordinate must be 2or -6

a line is of the length 5 and one endis at the point (1, -2)if the abscissa of the other end is 4 prove that its ordinate must be 2or -6

m

a line is of the length 5 and one endis at the point (1, -2)if the abscissa of the other end is 4 prove that its ordinate must be 2or -6

b

a line is of the length 5 and one endis at the point (1, -2)if the abscissa of the other end is 4 prove that its ordinate must be 2or -6

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