The four consecutive odd numbers which add up to 120 are 27, 29, 31 and 33. It can be found out as follows: Let 'x' be the smallest odd number. The next odd numbers will be 'x+2', 'x+4', 'x+6'. The addition of these four numbers will give 120. Therefore, x+(x+2)+(x+4)+(x+6)=120 4x+12=120 x+3=30 Therefore, x=27.
The numbers are (10- square root of 101) and (10+square root of 101)
78,90,23,49,76,and 345
They are: 1, 4, 9, 16 and 25
There are 100 of them, and unfortunately we're almost out of ink. But don't despair! You can easily find all of them on your own. Simply write all the counting numbers from 1 to 100 down the side of the paper, and write the square of each one next to it. The second column on your paper will be a list of all the square numbers, in order, up to 10,000 .
1,4,9,16,25,36,49,64,81,100,121,144,169,196,225,256,289,324,361,400 All the square numbers up to 20!
There are 22 of those. The biggest one is the square of 22, which is 484. It's easy for you to build your own list of all of them. -- Write down a list of the numbers from ' 1 ' to 22 . Then, one at a time . . . -- Multiply the number on your list by itself, and write the result next to it. -- When you finish doing that for all 22 numbers, you'll have the list of all square integers up to 500.
That will be difficult to answer specifically without the list of numbers, but as a general rule, test up to the square root.
square numbers 1 to 1000
A 30x30 Square A square has 4 equal sides, and when we add up the four sides we get 120. So to find the the square, we can do 120/4 = 30 This tells us that the square is 30x30
122
None of the factor pairs of 120 add up to -14. If that was -120, you could use -20 and 6.
92
145
67
-15+-8=-23 -15*-8=120
How about: 120+1.2 = 121.2