It's an even number
It's a rational number
It's a composite number
Its prime factors are 2, 5 and 7
It's the product of 7 and 10
It's LXX in Roman numerals
0.70
The equation 70 times 9 equals 630. This is a math problem.
No 70 is not a prime number.
115
The number of miles you would cover if you traveled for 8 hours at 70 miles per hour is a simple math problem. Simply multiply 70x8 to get an answer of 560 miles.
70%
I was halfway through composing a wonderful list of unique properties and facts surrounding the number 70, when I discovered that 70 is, in fact, a so called Weird Number. What exactly this is, I can not tell you, but Wikipedia says: 'A weird number number that is abundant but not semiperfect'. I hope that this will make sense to you, but as an answer to your question, yes, 70 is a weird number.
68 per cent means that either you learned 68 per cent of the information or your accuracy is 68 per cent. In mathematical terms though, 68 as a number is great in math, because without the number 68, the 69th number would be 70, and 70'ing with your girlfriend just is not.... not pretty.
70%
0.70
The equation 70 times 9 equals 630. This is a math problem.
math 7o is Algerbra II,a grade of C or better in math 59 or math 60 , or a score of 42 or above on ELM.
It is 70 feet. If you want to convert to some other unit of measure you need to tell us which unit you want so we can do the math for you
No number specifically indicates the height. You can however figure the height with a little math. As in 245/70-15 the 245 is the width of the tire in millimeters. The 70 is the aspect ratio which means the tire's height is 70% of the tires width. So on this example the height of the tire is 171.5 millimeters.
1, 2, 5, 7, 10, 14, 35, 70
There were 60 questions on the test. In order to solve this problem, set up the equation 42 = .70 * X, where X is the number of questions on the test. This essentially tells you 70% of what number (X) is 42. Divide 42 by .70 and you will get an answer of 60.
"seven tenths of a dollar" "seventy percent of a dollar" "the square root of 49 square pennies"