% cannot be a reminder if the divisor is 5, so the question is based on an error.
The largest possible number for a remainder is 1 less than the number of the divisor, so it is 5.
If it is divided by a fraction or a decimal. Like 1/5 or .986
5
To determine the remainder when dividing 63 by a divisor, you need to perform the division and look at the remainder. For example, if you divide 63 by 5, the remainder is 3. However, if you divide it by 7, the remainder is 0.
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
5
The largest possible number for a remainder is 1 less than the number of the divisor, so it is 5.
you can do divide 83 and 5 and that will be your biggest remainder.
Yes, provided the divisor is greater than 5.
It is not possible to answer this since the divisor is unknown.
The divisor is 9. quotient x divisor + remainder = dividend ⇒ quotient x divisor = dividend - remainder ⇒ divisor = (dividend - remainder) ÷ quotient = (53 - 8) ÷ 5 = 45 ÷ 5 = 9
5. The remainder will never be more than the divisor.
4
5
If it is divided by a fraction or a decimal. Like 1/5 or .986
To determine the remainder when dividing 63 by a divisor, you need to perform the division and look at the remainder. For example, if you divide 63 by 5, the remainder is 3. However, if you divide it by 7, the remainder is 0.
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