If 2 counters = 1/4 whole
2=1/4x
x4 x4
8=x
8 is the whole.
35 x 2 = 70There are 70 counters in a whole set.
Multiply by 4 - that way, you'll get a whole number 2.25 * 4 = 9
The answer is 1/4. There are 4 fourths in a whole. Convert 1/2 into 2/4, then subtract 1/4
The decimal 2 and one fourth is 2.25 because 25 is one fourth of 100.
If you're making an outline of a square, then 16 counters. You have the 4 corner counters, each shared by 2 sides and then in between the corner counters there are 3 counters on each of the 4 sides (4*3 = 12). If you're filling the inside of the square with counters, then you have 5 rows of 5 = 25 counters.
if 2 counters are 1/4 then what is one whole
2/3
35 x 2 = 70There are 70 counters in a whole set.
5/10 or 1/2.
If 14 counters is half, you multiply it by 2 to get 28 counters, which is one.
No. Integers are whole numbers.
If 35 is one half, then to get the full you multiply by 2 35 * 2 = 70
8 because half of 8 is 4 and 4+4 is 8
60 divided by 3 which is 20 times 2 which is 40
Quarter means one fourth, four of them equal one whole complete thing. 2 halves is one whole, and 4 quarters is one whole.
Multiply by 4 - that way, you'll get a whole number 2.25 * 4 = 9
Yes. When a creature has both -1/-1 counters and +1/+1 counters, you remove one of each until the card has only one kind. So if a creature had 3 -1/-1 counters on it, and an ability placed 2 +1/+1 counters on it, you would remove 2 of the +1/+1 counters and 2 -1/-1 counters, so it remains with only one -1/-1 counter. This action is a state-based action. If anyone would like to see this ruling in the Magic Comprehensive rules, you may find it at 120.2