1 ticket = 7
16 tickets = 7 x 16 = 112
5 tickets per student
idk
Imagine you have 20 objects at a cost of $90. Then the unit rate (the cost of one object) will be found by division. here $90 ÷ 20 = $4.50 (the unit price)
Dollars per gallon, because the dependent quantity is the dollars
24
($63.75/15) = $4.25$4.25 per ticket
4 dollars per ticket or 0.25 tickets per dollar.
Answer = use division as follows: 420$ / 15 tickets = 28$ / 1 ticket (read aloud as 28 dollars per ticket)
To get the unit rate, divide the total money by the amount of tickets in this case.
3.75 ÷ 5 = 0.75 Therefore, if dealing in British Sterling (£): each ticket is worth 75p (seventy-five pence).
5 tickets per student
a unit rate that gives you the cost....... maybe
5/8
idk
A unit rate is a rate that has a denominator of 1. Examples of unit rates include unit cost, gas, mileage and speed
A unit rate is a rate that has a denominator of 1. Examples of unit rates include unit cost, gas, mileage and speed
Imagine you have 20 objects at a cost of $90. Then the unit rate (the cost of one object) will be found by division. here $90 ÷ 20 = $4.50 (the unit price)