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You have $370. You find a DVD player that costs $257. New release movies cost $21 and older release movies cost $14. Write and solve an inequality to find the number of movies you can buy for your new DVD player if you buy an equal number of old and new movies.

1 Answer

4 votes

Answer:

you can buy at most 10 movies for your new DVD player if you buy an equal number of old and new movies, without exceeding your budget of $370

Explanation:

Let's use the variable "x" to represent the number of movies (both old and new) you can buy. Since you have $370 and each new release movie costs $21 and each older release movie costs $14, the total cost of the movies can be expressed as:

Total cost of movies = (Number of new movies + Number of old movies) × (Cost per new movie + Cost per old movie)

So, we have:

Total cost of movies = x × (21 + 14)

Now, you want to ensure that the total cost of the movies you buy doesn't exceed the amount of money you have, which is $370. Therefore, you can write the following inequality:

x × (21 + 14) ≤ 370

Simplify the inequality:

x × 35 ≤ 370

Now, to solve for "x," divide both sides of the inequality by 35:

x ≤ 370 / 35

x ≤ 10.57 (rounded to two decimal places)

answered
User Giantriant
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