8
10
When dividing 13 by 10, 1 is the quotient and 3 is the remainder
10 can go into 147 fourteen times, with a remainder of 7. This is calculated by dividing 147 by 10, which equals 14 with a remainder of 7. The remainder represents the amount left over after dividing as many times as possible by the divisor.
0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, or 9
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1 Under The Amount You Are Dividing By E.G The Highest Remainder Of 10 Would Be 9
24 goes into 58 two times, with a remainder of 10. This can be calculated by dividing 58 by 24, which equals 2 with a remainder of 10. The remainder is what is left over after dividing the dividend (58) by the divisor (24) as many times as possible.
in dividing decimals you never get a remainder and in dividing whole numbers you do. +++ More to the point perhaps, you are working in powers of 10 all the time.
No. If your remainder is greater than your divisor that means you haven't finished dividing as much as you can yet. For example, if you divide 100 by 10 and get 9 with a remainder of 10, that means that you can still divide once more to find the final answer of 10.
The largest remainder would be 8, because if it were 9 you could divide the number once more. The largest remainder you can have is always one less than what you're dividing by. So if you're dividing by 10, your largest remainder is 9. If you're dividing by 100, it's 99. And so on.
All number that are completely divisible by 10 (with no remainder) end in 0 (zero). Dividing 565 by 10 yields 56 with a remainder of 5 (or 56.5 or 56½) - so - NO - 565 is NOT divisible by 10.
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