Six whole halves. Each whole has two halves making it, 6(wholes)x2(#of halves in whole)= 12. 12 halves in 6 wholes.
Six wholes can be split into 12 halves
12
3 halves
Well, if there are 2 halves in 1 whole, 2x4=8. Or you could count as 2, 4, 6, 8.
There are two halves in 6. Each half represents one part of a whole, so when you divide 6 into halves, you get two equal parts of 3 each. This is because when you divide a number by 2, you are essentially splitting it into two equal parts.
12
Six wholes can be split into 12 halves
There are six halves in 3. This is because each whole (1) contains two halves, so when you multiply 3 by 2, you get 6 halves.
12
3 / 0.5 = 6
3 halves
There are 0.06 of them.
Well, if there are 2 halves in 1 whole, 2x4=8. Or you could count as 2, 4, 6, 8.
There are two halves in 6. Each half represents one part of a whole, so when you divide 6 into halves, you get two equal parts of 3 each. This is because when you divide a number by 2, you are essentially splitting it into two equal parts.
go answer my questions
6. 3x1/2=6.
Well, honey, if we're talking about cutting 12 into halves, you'd end up with 24 halves. But if you're asking how many halves are in 12 as a whole, the answer is just one big ol' 12. So, it all depends on how you slice it, sugar.