Test Bank For Intermediate Algebra 8th Edition Tobey Slater Blair and Crawford 0134178963 9780134178967
Test Bank For Intermediate Algebra 8th Edition Tobey Slater Blair and Crawford 0134178963 9780134178967
Test Bank For Intermediate Algebra 8th Edition Tobey Slater Blair and Crawford 0134178963 9780134178967
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edition-tobey-slater-blair-and-crawford-0134178963-9780134178967/
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slater-blair-and-crawford-0134178963-9780134178967/
MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.
Solve.
1) 13 = -29 + a
A) a = 42 B) a = -42 C) a = 16 D) a = -16
Answer: A
2) -14 = -30 + y
A) y = -44 B) y = 44 C) y = 16 D) y = -16
Answer: C
3) -5x = 30
A) x = 1 B) x = 35 C) x = -6 D) x = -35
Answer: C
4) 2x + 7 = 19
A) x = 10 B) x = 14 C) x = 2 D) x = 6
Answer: D
5) 6x - 2 = 22
A) x = 18 B) x = 22 C) x = 4 D) x = 5
Answer: C
6) -4x + 4 = 1 - 10x
14 1
A) x = - 2 B) x = 2 C) x = - D) x = -
5 2
Answer: D
7) 11x - 5 = 3x + 51
A) x = 10 B) x = 5 C) x = 7 D) x = 8
Answer: C
8) 77 + 4x + 3 = 12x
A) x = 8 B) x = 13 C) x = 11 D) x = 10
Answer: D
10) 6x - 1 - 7x + 2 = 5
4
A) x = - 2 B) x = C) x = - 4 D) x = 4
13
Answer: C
1
12) 4(x + 7) = 5(x - 3)
13
A) x = 13 B) x = 43 C) x = - D) No solution
9
Answer: B
14) 4(3x - 2) + 25 = 7x - 3
A) x = -4 B) x = -20 C) x = -100 D) x = 4
Answer: A
15) 2 - 5(y + 9) = 9 + 8y
34 2 38
A) y = - B) y = C) y = D) y = - 4
3 13 13
Answer: D
1
16) k=6
2
A) k = 9 B) k = 2 C) k = 8 D) k = 12
Answer: D
y 1 3
17) + =
3 5 4
33
A) y = B) y = 57 C) y = -1 D) y =
57
20 20
Answer: A
x 1
18) - 24 =
3 5
357 365 363 27
A) x = - B) x = C) x = D) x =
5 3 5 5
Answer: C
Answer: C
2
Solve.
1
20) (y + 9) - 5 = 12
4
A) y = 44 B) y = 77 C) y = 59 D) y = 23
Answer: C
3
3y 7
21) - = -6y
5 2
35 35 7 25
A) y = B) y = C) y = D) y = -
12 66 66 6
Answer: B
1
22) 11 - (y + 4) = -5
2
A) y = 23 B) y = 36 C) y = 28 D) y = 17
Answer: C
15x 1 7x
23) + =
4 2 2
A) x = 16 B) x = 2 C) x = -16 D) x = -2
Answer: D
7x
24) 4 + = 7 - (x + 3)
4
1
A) x = 0 B) x = C) x = 1 D) x = 8
8
Answer: A
5x + 8 5 3x
25) + =-
2 2 5
15 65 15 65
A) x = B) x = - C) x = - D) x = -
31 19 31 31
Answer: D
1 1
26) (x - 27) - (x - 5) = x - 7
9 5
495 405 225 135
A) x = B) x = C) x = D) x =
49 49 49 49
Answer: C
x+6 5 7
27) - =
4 2 2
21 15
A) x = 30 B) x = C) x = 18 D) x =
2 2
Answer: C
x+5 x-1
28) + =2
3 6
4
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of the place. Curtius, bk. 10, ch. 10.—Ovid, Fasti, bk. 5, li. 97;
Metamorphoses, bk. 8, fable 10.—Pausanias, bk. 8, ch. 17, &c.
Nonnus, a Greek writer of the fifth century, who wrote an account of the
embassy he had undertaken to Æthiopia, among the Saracens and
other eastern nations. He is also known by his Dionysiaca, a
wonderful collection of heathen mythology and erudition, edited 4to,
Antwerp, 1569. His paraphrase on John was edited by Heinsius,
8vo, Leiden, 1627.
Nōra, now Nour, a place of Phrygia, where Eumenes retired for some
time, &c. Cornelius Nepos.――A town. See: Norax.
Novæ (tabernæ), the new shops built in the forum at Rome, and adorned
with the shields of the Cimbri. Cicero, On Oratory, bk. 2,
ch. 66.――The Veteres tabernæ were adorned with those of the
Samnites. Livy, bk. 9, ch. 40.
Nox, one of the most ancient deities among the heathens, daughter of
Chaos. From her union with her brother Erebus she gave birth to the
Day and the Light. She was also the mother of the Parcæ,
Hesperides, Dreams, of Discord, Death, Momus, Fraud, &c. She is
called by some of the poets the mother of all things, of gods as well
as of men, and therefore she was worshipped with great solemnity by
the ancients. She had a famous statue in Diana’s temple at Ephesus. It
was usual to offer her a black sheep, as she was the mother of the
furies. The cock was also offered to her, as that bird proclaims the
approach of day, during the darkness of the night. She is represented
as mounted on a chariot, and covered with a veil bespangled with
stars. The constellations generally went before her as her constant
messengers. Sometimes she is seen holding two children under her
arms, one of which is black, representing death, or rather night, and
the other white, representing sleep or day. Some of the moderns have
described her as a woman veiled in mourning, and crowned with
poppies, and carried on a chariot drawn by owls and bats. Virgil,
Æneid, bk. 6, li. 950.—Ovid, Fasti, bk. 1, li. 455.—Pausanias,
bk. 10, ch. 38.—Hesiod, Theogony, lis. 125 & 212.
Numicia via, one of the great Roman roads, which led from the capital
to the town of Brundusium.
Nŭmīcus, a small river of Latium, near Lavinium, where the dead body
of Æneas was found, and where Anna, Dido’s sister, drowned
herself. Virgil, Æneid, bk. 7, li. 150, &c.—Silius Italicus, bk. 1,
li. 359.—Ovid, Metamorphoses, bk. 14, li. 358, &c.; Fasti, bk. 3,
li. 643.――A friend of Horace, to whom he addressed bk. 1, ltr. 6.
Numistro, a town of the Brutii in Italy. Livy, bk. 45, ch. 17.
Nundīna, a goddess whom the Romans invoked when they named their
children. This happened the ninth day after their birth, whence the
name of the goddess, Nona dies. Macrobius, Saturnalia, bk. 1,
ch. 16.
Nypsius, a general of Dionysius the tyrant, who took Syracuse, and put
all the inhabitants to the sword. Diodorus, bk. 16.
Oăsis, a town about the middle of Libya, at the distance of seven days’
journey from Thebes in Egypt, where the Persian army, sent by
Cambyses to plunder Jupiter Ammon’s temple, was lost in the sands.
There were two other cities of that name very little known. Oasis
became a place of banishment under the lower empire. Strabo,
bk. 17.—Zosimus, bk. 5, ch. 97.—Herodotus, bk. 3, ch. 26.
Oaxes, a river of Crete, which received its name from Oaxus the son of
Apollo. Virgil, Eclogues, poem 1, li. 66.
Obringa, now Ahr, a river of Germany, falling into the Rhine above
Rimmagen.
Oceia, a woman who presided over the sacred rites of Vesta for 57 years
with the greatest sanctity. She died in the reign of Tiberius, and the
daughter of Domitius succeeded her. Tacitus, Annals, bk. 2, ch. 86.
Oceănĭdes and Oceanītĭdes, sea nymphs, daughters of Oceanus, from
whom they received their name, and of the goddess Tethys. They
were 3000 according to Apollodorus, who mentions the names of
seven of them: Asia, Styx, Electra, Doris, Eurynome, Amphitrite, and
Metis. Hesiod speaks of the eldest of them, and reckons 41: Pitho,
Admete, Prynno, Ianthe, Rhodia, Hippo, Callirhoe, Urania, Clymene,
Idyia, Pasithoe, Clythia, Zeuxo, Galuxaure, Plexaure, Perseis, Pluto,
Thoe, Polydora, Melobosis, Dione, Cerceis, Xantha, Acasta, Ianira,
Telestho, Europa, Menestho, Petrea, Eudora, Calypso, Tyche,
Ocyroe, Crisia, Amphiro, with those mentioned by Apollodorus,
except Amphitrite. Hyginus mentions 16, whose names are almost all
different from those of Apollodorus and Hesiod, which difference
proceeds from the mutilation of the original text. The Oceanides, like
the rest of the inferior deities, were honoured with libations and
sacrifices. Prayers were offered to them, and they were entreated to
protect sailors from storms and dangerous tempests. The Argonauts,
before they proceeded on their expedition, made an offering of flour,
honey, and oil, on the sea-shore, to all the deities of the sea, and
sacrificed bulls to them, and entreated their protection. When the
sacrifice was made on the sea-shore the blood of the victim was
received in a vessel, but when it was in the open sea, the blood was
permitted to run down into the waters. When the sea was calm, the
sailors generally offered a lamb or a young pig, but if it was agitated
by the winds, and rough, a black bull was deemed the most
acceptable victim. Homer, Odyssey, bk. 3.—Horace.—Apollonius,
Argonautica.—Virgil, Georgics, bk. 4, li. 341.—Hesiod, Theogony,
li. 349.—Apollodorus, bk. 1.
Ocnus, a son of the Tiber and of Manto, who assisted Æneas against
Turnus. He built a town, which he called Mantua after his mother’s
name. Some suppose that he is the same as Bianor. Virgil, Eclogues,
poem 9; Æneid, bk. 10, li. 198.――A man remarkable for his
industry. He had a wife as remarkable for her profusion; she always
consumed and lavished away whatever the labours of her husband
had earned. He is represented as twisting a cord, which an ass
standing by eats up as soon as he makes it; whence the proverb of the
cord of Ocnus often applied to labour which meets no return, and
which is totally lost. Propertius, bk. 4, poem 3, li. 21.—Pliny, bk. 35,
ch. 11.—Pausanias, bk. 10, ch. 29.
Octogesa, a town of Spain, a little above the mouth of the Iberus, now
called Mequinensa. Cæsar, Gallic War, bk. 1, ch. 61.
Ocypĕte, one of the Harpies, who infected whatever she touched. The
name signifies swift flying. Hesiod, Theogony, li. 265.—Apollodorus,
bk. 1, ch. 9.――A daughter of Thaumas.――A daughter of Danaus.
Odessus, a seaport town at the west of the Euxine sea in Lower Mœsia,
below the mouths of the Danube. Ovid, bk. 1, Tristia, poem 9, li. 57.
Œa, a city of Africa, now Tripoli. Pliny, bk. 5, ch. 4.—Silius Italicus,
bk. 3, li. 257.――Also a place in Ægina. Herodotus, bk. 5, ch. 83.
Œniadæ, a town of Acarnania. Livy, bk. 26, ch. 24; bk. 38, ch. 11.
Œnoe, a nymph who married Sicinus, the son of Thoas king of Lemnos.
From her the island of Sicinus had been called Œnoe.――Two
villages of Attica were also called Œnoe. Herodotus, bk. 5, ch. 74.—
Pliny, bk. 4, ch. 7.――A city of Argolis, where Œneus fled when
driven from Calydon. Pausanias, bk. 2, ch. 25.――A town of Elis in
the Peloponnesus. Strabo.—Apollodorus, bk. 1, ch. 8.—Pausanias,
bk. 1, &c.
Œnotrĭdes, two small islands on the coast of Lucania, where some of the
Romans were banished by the emperors. They were called Ischia and
Pontia.
Oglosa, an island in the Tyrrhene sea, east of Corsica, famous for wine,
and now called Monte Christo. Pliny, bk. 3, ch. 6.