5% of the total test score per question.
If all the questions are worth the same and the whole test is 100 points, then each question is worth 12.5 points
If the test is worth 100 points, each question would be worth approximately 2.86 points.
You can only miss 16 points on a 100 point test in order to get an 84%. If the questions are worth 2 points EACH, you can miss 8. If the questions are worth 4 points each, you can only miss 4 questions.
2.5
3
If all the questions are worth the same and the whole test is 100 points, then each question is worth 12.5 points
If the test is worth 100 points, each question would be worth approximately 2.86 points.
You can only miss 16 points on a 100 point test in order to get an 84%. If the questions are worth 2 points EACH, you can miss 8. If the questions are worth 4 points each, you can only miss 4 questions.
You cannot know that. If you are told the total number of points for the test, you know (or count) the number of questions and you are told that each question is worth the same number of points then, and only then, each question is worth (total points/number of questions) points.
2.5
Assuming the test is 100 points total, if you had 40 questions each would be worth 2.5 points. With only 39, each is worth slightly more than that, but a teacher might decide to make them 2.5 points each to simplify the math and just give you 2.5 free points for showing up.
It depends on how many points each question is worth. If they are worth 1 point, 30, 2 points, 15, etc...
3
There would be (8) 5 point questions and (30) 2 point questions for a total of 38 questions and 100 points.
Making the totally unjustified and quite possibly unlikely assumption that all questions are worth the same number of marks, each question would be worth 1/18 of the total number of points.
if one of the questions is a bonus it is 2 points each
10 questions normally for books with 19 and under points 20 questions for books worth 20 and over points!