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Exact(5)
A plausible minimum coverage can therefore be estimated by multiplying the denominator by 6.4 whilst maximum coverage may be estimated by multiplying the denominator by 5 and 95% confidence intervals can be calculated for each estimate.
Rather than multiplying the denominator by nine, therefore, it is arguably more sensible to multiply by 5.5 (i.e. 9 minus 3.5).
Instead of multiplying the denominator alone, you must multiply the entire fraction by the digit required for changing the original denominator into the LCD.
You can do this by multiplying the denominator and whole number of a mixed number, and then adding this to the numerator of the fraction of the mixed number.
For example, The complex conjugate of (4 - 6i) is (4 + 6i) The complex conjugate of (3 + 6i) is (3 - 6i) defer.add img); Multiplying the denominator by its complex conjugate will change it to the difference of 2 squares making it become a real number.
Similar(55)
By either writing out the multiples, using prime factorization, or by multiplying the denominators.
Furthermore, we multiplied the denominator with the average link weight for all links with a weight greater than zero.
To account for expected under-ascertainment of less severe cases, we multiplied the denominator (total cases) by a factor of ten when calculating hospitalization and case-fatality rates [24].
Multiply the denominator by a number that will give you the LCM as the product.
Multiply the denominator by the number needed to get the LCD.
Multiply the denominator of the complex fraction by the LCD as you did with the numerator.
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determining the denominator
increasing the denominator
multiplying the standard
calculating the denominator
expanding the denominator
computing the denominator
multiplying the incidence
multiplying the model
multiplying the result
multiplying the problem
multiplying the time
multiplying the relation
multiplying the phenotypic
multiplying the centerline
multiplying the treatment
multiplying the length
multiplying the orthogonalization
multiplying the staining
multiplying the equation
multiplying the volume
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