Answer:
To represent parts of whole numbers, we use fractions.
So if 4 kids are sharing 3 cookies, what happens?
First, we divide one cookie into four equal parts, and give one part to each kid. Then we do the same with the second cookie, and then with the third one.
In the end, each kid will have three pieces. Each piece is a whole cookie divided into four equal parts.
So we represent this amount as
3 (Number of parts) & 4 (How many equal parts the whole is divided into)
3
4
as a fraction
A fraction is made of two numbers :
1/12c = 0.6
To remove a fraction you simply multiply it by its inverse fraction (take the original fraction and flip it! So, multiply it by 12/1 (which is the same as saying 12).
12(1/12c) = 0.6*12
The 12 cancels out leaving this:
c = 0.6 * 12
c = 7.2
If you don't have or are allowed to use a calculator. To compute that you simply make 0.6 into a fraction then multiply the numerator by 12. .6 is in the tenths place so you can write it like this:
6/10 simplifying it becomes, 3/5
3/5 * 12 = 36/5
Now! That was assuming 1/12c was written like this:
(1/12)c = 0.6
If it was actually written like this:
1/(12c) = 0.6 then you'll do this.
Multiply 0.6 by 12c. Which will get you 7.2c. After that you need to get c alone, so you divide both sides by 7.2. Yielding the result:
1/7.2 = c
c = 0.1389...
Answer:
3
Step-by-step explanation: if he has 2 rows of four on each page and 13 pages 8 * 13 is 104 and 107 - 104 is 3
Okay so.
If lawn tickets are $30 and seat tickets are $50 and they sold 200 seat tickets.
50 multiplied by 200 is = $ 10,000
And the goal is $14,000.
So $14,000 subtract $10,000 is $4000
$4000 is how much they made in Lawn Tickets. In order to calculate how much lawn tickets were sold, is dividing $4000 by $30 since lawn tickets are $30.
4000 divided by $30 = 133
Not sure if this is correct but all the working and steps are correct! Hope this helps.