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1 vote
A line contains the points A, B, C, and D. Point B is

between points A and C. Point D is between points C
and B. Which of the following inequalities must be true
about the lengths of these segments?
F. BC < AB
G. BD < AB
H. BD < CD
J. CD < AB
K. CD

A line contains the points A, B, C, and D. Point B is between points A and C. Point-example-1
User Eduard Uta
by
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2 Answers

4 votes

Answer:

a

Explanation:

aa

User StackFlower
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5.6k points
7 votes

The inequality that must be true about the lengths of these segments is: CD < BC.

How to interpret the line segment division?

The segment addition postulate states that if B is a point on a line segment AC, then the sum of the lengths of AB and BC is equal to the length of the entire segment AC.

In formula form, it can be expressed as AB + BC = AC.

There are many different arrangements of points that satisfy the conditions. But, in all of these, the order of points starting from point A is A, B, D, C.

Because D is between C and B, distance CD is always shorter than distance BC. So, CD < BC.

User Lensovet
by
5.6k points