Module 8 Business Decisions Capital Gains Page 705‚ question 30 30A- How much tax will you have saved by waiting? $1‚250 $25‚000 X .10 = $2‚500 $25‚000 X .15 = $3‚750 $3‚750 - $2‚500 = $1‚250 30B- How much would you save in 36% bracket? Between $2‚000 to $4‚400 $25‚000 X .20 = $5‚000 $25‚000 X .28 = $7‚000 to $9‚900 $7‚000 - $5‚000 = $2‚000 $9‚900 - $5‚000 = $4‚400 Interpreting the numbers Page 743‚ Question 20 2‚300 2‚430‚ 2‚018‚ 2‚540‚ 2‚675‚ 4‚800
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Centre Number For Examiner’s Use Candidate Number Surname Other Names Examiner’s Initials Candidate Signature Pages General Certificate of Secondary Education Foundation Tier November 2013 Mark 2–3 4–5 6–7 Mathematics 43601F Unit 1 Wednesday 6 November 2013 9.00 am to 10.00 am For this paper you must have: l mathematical instruments. 10 – 11 12 – 13 14 – 15 16 – 17 a calculator l F 8–9 TOTAL Time allowed l 1 hour Instructions
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Understanding What You Read – Week 3 Week 3- Chapter 5- Understanding Your Customer 1. Identify demographic trends that are occurring in the United States‚ related to (a) number of single-person households‚ (b) median age for marriage‚ (c) birthrate‚ (d) U.S. population growth‚ and (e) number of male homemakers. Single person households are showing the greatest increase in numbers and that trend is projected to continue. Birthrate has remained relatively stable in the United States since
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1998 9 14 1. 1.1 Markov Property 1.2 Wiener Process 1.3 2. 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 Taylor Expansion 2.7 3. Stochastic 3.1 3.2 SDE(Stochastic Differential Equation) 4. Stochastic 4.1 Stochastic integration 4.2 Ito Integral 4.3 Ito Integral 4.4 5. Ito’s Lemma 5.1 Stochastic 5.1.1 5.1.2 5.1.3 First Order Term Second Order Term Cross Product Terms “ ” – Ito Integral Riemann (Ordinary Differential Equation) (Chain rule) 5.2 Ito’s Lemma 6. 6.1 6.1.1 6.1.2 Closed-Form Solution Numerical Solution
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let f(x) be a quadratic polynomial such that that f(2)= -3 and f(-2)=21‚ then the co-efficient of x in f(x) is a. -3 b. 0 c. -6 d. 2 1. if f(x) =x3 +ax+b is divisible by (x-1) 2 ‚then the remainder obtained when f(x) is divided by (x+2) is ; a. 1 b . 0 c. 3 d. -10 3. the remainder when x1999 is divided
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2008 H I G H E R S C H O O L C E R T I F I C AT E E X A M I N AT I O N Mathematics General Instructions • Reading time – 5 minutes • Working time – 3 hours • Write using black or blue pen • Board-approved calculators may be used • A table of standard integrals is provided at the back of this paper • All necessary working should be shown in every question Total marks – 120 • Attempt Questions 1–10 • All questions are of equal value 212 BLANK PAGE – 2 – Total marks – 120
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THE IMPORTANCE OF MATHEMATICS W. T. Gowers It is with some disbelief that I stand here and prepare to address this gathering on the subject of the importance of mathematics. For a start‚ it is an extraordinary honour to be invited to give the keynote address at a millennium meeting in Paris. Secondly‚ giving a lecture on the significance of mathematics demands wisdom‚ judgment and maturity‚ and there are many mathematicians far better endowed than I am with these qualities‚ including several
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Discuss the cause of the Tacoma bridge disaster‚ in terms of waves‚ vibrations‚ and resonance. Elaborate the effects with relevant equations and formulae. The Tacoma bridge collapse can be attributed to the waves caused by the buildup of energetic vibrations. These energetic vibrations were built up from the bridge “taking energy from the steadily blowing wind” (Crowell). Eventually enough of these energetic vibrations built up to cause resonance within the system‚ causing the wave-like motion
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Brief Introduction: AJ Davis is a department store chain‚ which has many credit customers and want to find out more information about these customers. AJ Davis has complied a sample of 50 credit customers with data selected in the following variables: Location‚ Income (in $1‚000’s)‚ Size (Number of people living in the household)‚ Years (number of years the customer has lived in the current location)‚ and Credit Balance (customers current credit card balance on the store’s credit car‚ in $)
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Geometry PJ Architecture and Geometry Architecture and geometry are perfect complements of each other they go hand to hand in so many ways let’s discuss some of these ways. Architecture has geometry written all over it if geometry never existed Architecture wouldn’t have existed either. First of all geometry is the reason that we can calculate and measure the sizes and shapes of certain structures for us to use. Geometry allows us pin point exactly how much more we may need or less ‚ without
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