1 minute = 60 seconds 1 hour = 60 minutes 6 hours = (6 x 60) = 360 minutes = (6 x 60 x 60) = 21,600 seconds for 500 questions. Each question = (360 / 500) = 0.72 minutesEach question also = (21,600 / 500) = 43.2 secondsGood luck. For your sake, I hope it's not a math test.
It will take one minute for Jacinta to solve 20 questions and it will take 3 minutes for her friend to solve 20 questions.
It is quite a simple question to solve using a calculator. 298 hours = 298*60 minutes = 298*60*60 seconds.
It depends on the question.
To solve this problem, we would start by writing out what we were given: 6.1 hours x 60 minutes/1 hour. With this ratio, we can cancel out the hours, so we solve the arithmetic 6.1 x 60 = 366 minutes. The term that did not cancel is minutes, so that is what we're left with, which is what we wanted.
to solve 389 minutes into seconds you would multiply the minutes by how many seconds are in a minute 389x60=23340 seconds. and to solve 389 minutes into hours, you would divide the minutes into how many minutes there are in an hour 389/60 = 6.483333333333333333333333333 rounded to 6.483 hours... the rest... uhh... someone else can figure it out
You cannot "solve" percentages. You can have questions or equations relating to percentages which you may wish to solve. The methods for doing so will depend on the nature of the question.
I have the same junken question
You do not solve a standard normal distribution. It is not a question nor an equation or inequality to be solved. You can answer questions using the standard normal distribution but what you do depends on the question and on what information is given.
There is no single solution to all questions involving scientific notation. Different questions have different answers and so the question will need to be more specific.
Different math questions require different methods to solve.
You do not solve ratios: they are simply a form of numbers. There may be questions whose solutions require you to work with ratios but there the answer will depend on the sort of question you have to deal with.
You cannot solve subsets - in the same way that you cannot solve people. There may be questions associated with subsets that you may solve but you have not given any questions.