If the meterstick was broken into 2 perfect halves, then the answer would be 50cm.
If the whole stick was 54cm, and it was broken into 2 pieces, then the answer would be 27cm.
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The question refers to breaking the rule into uneven parts, one at 54cm, so then the other part is 100-54 = 46cm.
30 full rectangles and one 4 cm x 25 cm strip If you separate the original cardboard into a 40 cm x 25 cm piece and a 12 cm x 25 cm piece, you can get 25 8x5 pieces from the first piece and, measuring the other way, six 8x5 pieces from the second (31 total 8x5 pieces).
one fifth is 3.2m. so one three-fifths piece is 9.6m and the two-fifths piece is 5.4m
for a piecewise function, the domain is broken into pieces, with a different rule defining the function for each piece
This is a trick question: if the ends of the object are not connected, you would get 101 pieces. If the object is something like a rubber band with no end piece, you would have 100 pieces.
Oh, what a happy little problem we have here! If we let the length of the shorter piece be x inches, then the longer piece would be 3x inches. Since the total length is 80 inches, we can set up the equation x + 3x = 80 and solve for x. The shorter piece is 20 inches long and the longer piece is 60 inches long. It's just that easy!
If the original meterstick was broken into two pieces, and one piece is 54 cm long, then the other piece would be the total length of the meterstick (100 cm) minus the length of the first piece. Therefore, the length of the other piece would be 100 cm - 54 cm = 46 cm.
You think probable to atoms.
you started off with one piece, broke it, and now you have two pieces of equal length
No. The ship broke into two main sections during the sinking, plus many more smaller pieces broke or fell off.
A 102 centimmeter board is cut into two pieces so that one piece is five times as the other . How long is each piece
Yes, in chess, the king can capture other pieces by moving to a square occupied by an opponent's piece.
sort of. magnetic fields in a bar magnet always run south to north. if you break it in half, that same S-->N direction still applies. in fact if you were to break it up into smaller & small pieces you would still have that relationship. that is to say, you wouldn't have a north only piece and a south only piece.
The plural form of the noun 'piece' is spelled pieces, just as in your question.
Piece of paper
Yes, in chess, the king can attack other pieces on the board by moving to a square that is adjacent to the opponent's piece.
Yes, the king in chess can attack other pieces on the board by moving to a square that is adjacent to the opposing piece.
Yes, in chess, kings can capture pieces just like any other piece on the board. However, it is not common for kings to take pieces because they are the most valuable and vulnerable piece on the board.