part / total
For example, if you have 20 (total) apples, and eat 5 (part) apples, then you would divide
5 (part) / 20 (total)
and you would get 25% of the total amount were eaten
yes but they don't count towards your bating average
That is a good question because the NCBTMB keeps many of its inner workings a mystery. First of all, they only count 120 out of the 160. Also, they do not use a straight percentage, they use a scaled score; they adjust the percentage in relation to the different versions of the test. A rough guess, since only they know which questions count, would be about 120 right answers to pass the 600 question exam.
count all people who complete the task in the specified time interval. Divide that by 19 and multiply by 100
One way to determine the reading level of a book is to count the number of words, and identify the percentage of , for instance, 4 syllable words, 3 syllable words, and 2 syllable words. The higher the percentage of multisyllable words, the more reading difficulty.
The percentage of 2/5 is 40%. To make it easier to understand, you first count how many 5's are in 100 and there is 20. And the reason it's 100 is because a whole fraction is equals up to 100. Because it's 2/5 you double 20% making it 40%. If you don't understand this method post another question that says "What is a percentage?" I hope this helped you.
yes
Yes. It will be scored as an out. It will count as being on base though so it will not negatively effect an on base percentage.
The average sperm count today is around 60 million per milliliter
In terms of what, weight, atom count, charge...
40-70%
Yes, but they don't affect your batting average.
yes but they don't count towards your bating average
27.4% if you don't count pot farmers. If you do it jumps to 43.9%
10% If you mean Born again christians. If you count catholics. Then 80%
LY - is the lymphocyte count or percentage. 20-40% is normal
It's non-abusable unless you count killing a plant as abuse.
The CD4 count is the result of the most important test used to monitor HIV. The 'absolute' count is the same as the CD4 count. This is the result you get back from your doctor. The term 'absolute' is used to differentiate it from CD4 percentage (CD4%) which can also be used for clinical management.