2+3 times 2
then 4 plus 3 equals 28 and 3 plus 3 equals 18 and 7 plus 5 equals 84 .... its easy you just have to multiply the answer with the first number.. for example : 2 plus 3 equals 5 but when you multiply the answer with the first number (2) it becomes equals 10, and so on the others..
144
144
144 add the two numbers and multiply by the first 2(2 + 3) = 10 7(7 + 2) = 63 etc.
10 - 3 + 2 = 2 is a false statement. 10 - 3 + 2 = 9
The answer is -7
7+3=10 10*2=20
96
144
26
2 plus 3 equals 5 7 plus 2 equals 9 6 plus 9 equals 15 8 plus 4 equals 12 9 plus 7 equals 16 Am I missing something here? Probably. You say 2+3=5, but the question clearly states 2+3=10. Why would it say that? Suppose you had only one hand. You count 1,2,3,4,5,10,11,12. That last doesn't mean "twelve" as we know it, Jim. It means one hand (5), plus 2 spare ones. We could say: if 2+3=10, 5+2=12.
Since 2 plus 4 is not 10, the "if" statement is false. Given a false "if", logically, 9 + 2 can equal anything you like.