45 roses, plus some number of daffodils and tulips, are blooming in a garden. Four times as many daffodils as roses are blooming, and 15 more tulips than roses are blooming. Then a gardener uses all of the flowers to make identical bouquets. What is the maximum number of bouquets the gardener could have make?
There are \(4\) times as many daffodils as roses, which means that there are \(45 \times 4 = 180\) daffodils.
The second peice of information tells us there are \(15\) tulips than roses, meaning there is \(45+15=60\) tulips.
We already know there are \(45\) roses.
We can not solve anymore, because we do not know how many flowers are in a bouquet.