for the meat, you need\(9\div\frac{1}{2}=18 bags\)
for the cheese you need\(5\div\frac{1}{4}=20bags\)
\(18+20+38bags\)
so 38 bags!
hope this helps,
XxmathguyxX
25+1+1+1=28
is this a trick question? he decided to make enough Indian Pudding for everyone in his class to have half of a cup of pudding.
so maybe 25...............
nice! i didn't see it until now proyaop!
last point? Can you give a picture?
but if it looks like a right triangle, then since the top left point lines with the bottm left, there is exactly enough room for another right triangle in the rectangle
@ #3 guest
i'm pretty sure you can solve that, pretty similar to the question asked
\(\sqrt{45}+2\sqrt5+\frac{\sqrt{360}}{\sqrt2}\)
\(3\sqrt5+2\sqrt5+\frac{\sqrt{360}}{\sqrt2}\)
\(3\sqrt{5}+2\sqrt{5}+6\sqrt{5}\)
\(11\sqrt{5}\)
Just as builderboi said!
\(\frac{5}{8}\times\frac{1}{5}=\frac{5\times1}{8\times5}=\frac{5}{40} simplify, \frac{1}{8}\)
I think you made a mistake on format you wrote \(\frac{1}{(\frac{1}{3})^2}\) instead of \(\frac{1}{(\frac{1}{3})^3}\)
Hello!
i am realizing that by saying hello, your post got like 13 views when the others have 5
https://web2.0calc.com/questions/hewo to this link