Math, asked by sandeepoef121, 6 months ago

Please anyone tell me this question because I am not able to solve​

Attachments:

Answers

Answered by BrookTheBigBrain
0

Answer:

\frac{119}{108}

Step-by-step explanation:

First, lets solve what's in the firsts set of parentheses:

\frac{4}{9} -\frac{3}{11}

We need to make both of the fractions have a common denominator:

\frac{44}{99}-\frac{27}{99}

Subtract the numerators and keep the denominator the same:

\frac{17}{99}

Next, let's solve whats in the next set of parentheses:

2\frac{3}{4} +3\frac{2}{3}

Turn the fractions into improper fractions:

\frac{11}{4}+\frac{11}{3}

Now, we need to make both of the fractions have a common denominator:

\frac{33}{12} +\frac{44}{12}

Add the numerators and keep the denominators the same:

\frac{77}{12}

Now the new problem is \frac{17}{99} *\frac{77}{12}

Multiply the numerator and the denominators:

\frac{1309}{1188}

Simplify:

\frac{119}{108}

If this helped, please mark as Brainliest answer!

Have a GREAT day!

:)

Similar questions