Each person would receive two whole apples and one third each.
To share 2 apples among 3 people equally, you can cut one apple in half, giving each person 0.5 apples. Then, cut the second apple in half, giving each person another 0.5 apples. This way, each person will have a total of 1 apple, and the apples are shared equally among the 3 people.
You make applesauce.
only if you can cut each of the apple in 3 or 6 pieces if you cut in 3 pieces each, each person would have 2 pieces of apple if you cut in 6 pieces each, each person would have 4 pieces of apple
Oh, dude, sharing 6 apples equally among 7 people? That's like trying to fit a square peg into a round hole. Each person would get 6/7 of an apple, which is like a sad, tiny fraction of fruity goodness. So basically, you're looking at a lot of disappointed faces with those measly apple slices.
Six people are going to share $111 equally. How many $100 bills does each person get you say? Well first of all, nobody is gonna get $100 bills. To find the answer You have to divide $111 by 6 and the answer is $18.50 (if you were talking money).
To share 2 apples among 3 people equally, you can cut one apple in half, giving each person 0.5 apples. Then, cut the second apple in half, giving each person another 0.5 apples. This way, each person will have a total of 1 apple, and the apples are shared equally among the 3 people.
You make applesauce.
To share 3.60 equally among a group of people, you would divide 3.60 by the number of people. If there are 3 people, each person would receive 1.20.
To share 12 apples equally among 5 bags, you would distribute 2 apples into each of the 5 bags, which accounts for 10 apples total. This leaves you with 2 apples remaining. You can either keep these extras aside or distribute them further as needed, but each bag would contain 2 apples to ensure an equal share.
If not a trick question, then 3.
40 each
they each get 2/5ths of the bottle of water
only if you can cut each of the apple in 3 or 6 pieces if you cut in 3 pieces each, each person would have 2 pieces of apple if you cut in 6 pieces each, each person would have 4 pieces of apple
they each get 2 and 1/4 apples
Easy peasy lemon squeezy! You tell one person to take a hike because there ain't enough apples to go around. Then you give 10 apples to the remaining 11 people, leaving one apple for you to enjoy while you watch them fight over the rest. Voilà, problem solved!
"Each" in a math word problem simply means every individual item or person in a group. So if you have 5 apples and you want to divide them equally among 2 people, each person would get 2 apples with 1 left over. It's just a fancy way of saying "every one of them."
Oh, dude, sharing 6 apples equally among 7 people? That's like trying to fit a square peg into a round hole. Each person would get 6/7 of an apple, which is like a sad, tiny fraction of fruity goodness. So basically, you're looking at a lot of disappointed faces with those measly apple slices.