Math, asked by madhumitha4687, 6 hours ago

find the LCM of 158 and 200
find the LCM of 26 and 32
find the LCM of 32 and 58
find the LCM of 25 and 37
find the LCM of 49 and 98
with step by step explanation​

Answers

Answered by four59
1

Answer:

find the LCM of 158 and 200

find the LCM of 26 and 32

find the LCM of 32 and 58

find the LCM of 25 and 37

find the LCM of 49 and 98

with step by step explanation

Step-by-step explanation:

find the LCM of 158 and 200

find the LCM of 26 and 32

find the LCM of 32 and 58

find the LCM of 25 and 37

find the LCM of 49 and 98

with step by step explanation

Answered by lokeshnandigam69
4

Answer:

In classical geometry, a radius of a circle or sphere is any of the line segments from its center to its perimeter, and in more modern usage, it is also their length. The name comes from the Latin radius, meaning ray but also the spoke of a chariot wheel

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