Answer:
Option B
Explanation:
to find the answer, you're going to break the phrase into different parts
these parts would be "13 more than", and "the product of 4 and a number, n"
"13 more than" means that you are adding 13 to the pile, so algebraically, this would be written as "+13" or "13+"
"the product of 4 and a number, n" is one thing, but it can be broken down even further to "the product of" and "4 and a number, n"
"the product of" means a multiplication sign, I know this because the term for the answer of multiplying numbers is "product"
"4 and a number, n" means that it is one thing that includes 4 and n together, so this would create 4n
if you put this all together, you would get "4n + 13" or "13 + 4n", these are the same thing, just written in different orders