H.C.F of x2 - y2 , x - y is
Answers
Step-by-step explanation:
Other Number = 60
Step-by-step explanation:
Given:
HCF of two numbers is 12.
LCM of two numbers is 180.
One number is 36.
To Find:
What is the other number ?
Solution: For two numbers a and b , we know that
(a × b) = {HCF(a , b) × {LCM(a , b)
or
Product of two numbers = HCF × LCM
Let the other number be b. Then we have
One number = 36
Another number = b
\implies{\rm }⟹ 36 × b = 12 × 180
\implies{\rm }⟹ 36b = 2160
\implies{\rm }⟹ b = 2160/36
\implies{\rm }⟹ b = 60
Hence, the other number is 60.
[ Verification ]
a × b = LCM × HCF
36 × 60 = 180 × 12
2160 = 2160
\large\bold{\texttt {Verified }}Verified
Step-by-step explanation:
Things began to pick up for me record-wise when in 1971 I wrote “She’s a Lady” for Tom Jones. The first meeting I had with Tom Jones, Engelbert Humperdinck, and Gordon Mills, their manager, they came to my home in New York and we tried to make a deal for my publishing company. It’s late at night, and we’re watching a movie at my house and they are all drinking champagne. The next day I woke up, looked in the living room, and my wife, being a significant decorator, and I were shocked to find all our bowls of potpourri empty. They had eaten all of it thinking it was potato chips.
I wrote “She’s a Lady” on the back of a TWA menu, flying back from London after doing Tom Jones’s TV show. Jones’s manager wanted me to write him a song. If I have an idea and I don’t have a pad of paper, I’ll write on whatever is available. What’s the difference? Paper is paper. And those blank pages on the back covers of menus are nice and hard. I like the look of them, and I can print on them without needing anything for support. When I’m writing, I generally toy with an idea until it manifests itself—meaning a phrase or a tune comes into my head and eventually begins to jell. When something hits me, I write it down immediately. I don’t wait, or it’s gone. You just cherish those moments and write on anything—the stewardess’s leg if need be.