4
The divisor is 9. quotient x divisor + remainder = dividend ⇒ quotient x divisor = dividend - remainder ⇒ divisor = (dividend - remainder) ÷ quotient = (53 - 8) ÷ 5 = 45 ÷ 5 = 9
Well, darling, when you divide any number by 5, the largest remainder you can get is 4. Why? Because when you divide by 5, the remainders can only be 0, 1, 2, 3, or 4. So, if you wanna keep it simple and sassy, the largest remainder with a divisor of 5 is 4.
5
5. The remainder will never be more than the divisor.
% cannot be a reminder if the divisor is 5, so the question is based on an error.
The greatest remainder when dividing by a number is always one less than that number. Therefore, for the divisors 3, 8, and 5, the greatest remainders would be 2 (for 3), 7 (for 8), and 4 (for 5). Among these, the largest remainder is 7, which corresponds to the divisor 8.
Yes, provided the divisor is greater than 5.
The remainder divided by the divisor is the fraction. For example 12 divided by 7 is 1 with remainder of 5; the remainder fraction is 5/7 so answer is 1 and 5/7
no. The remainder should be less than the divisor. If you get a remainder of 5 and did not make any other mistake, add one to the quotient and the remainder will be 1.
It is not possible to answer this since the divisor is unknown.
The greatest remainder when dividing by 5 is 4. This is because when a number is divided by 5, the possible remainders are 0, 1, 2, 3, and 4. Since 4 is the highest value in this set, it is the greatest remainder one can obtain when using 5 as the divisor.
If one number divides into another with no remainder, the first number is called a divisor or a factor of the second. Example: 5 divides into 30 exactly 6 times with no remainder, so 5 is a divisor of 30; 5 is a factor of 30.