AnswerIf its a number under 100 (lets say 63) it would just equal 63% now over 100. AnswerYou cannot change a single number, by itself, to a percentage. A percentage tells you how much of a total you may have. So if you have the number 77, alone, you cannot make it a percentage. However, if you know you have 77 out of 100 framises, then 77 represents 77 percent of all the framises. However, if you have 77 out of 200 framises, then 77 represents 38.5 percent of all the framises.So to make a number into a percentage, you take that number, divide it by the total and multiply the result by 100. But you must have that second number, the total, before you can make a percentage.
t+0.5+t=2t
The total angle measurement is 720 degrees.
First year = x Second year = x + 500 Third year = x + 1000 Fourth year = x + 1500 Total = 4x + 3000 = 17800 4x = 14800 x = 3700 The man was paid 3700 in the first year.
total admits/total days x 1000
The total change in yardage is 1, on the basis of the above
the receiver who first catches the ball gets credit for the catch and the number of yards he gains until he pitches the ball. The player whom the ball is pitched to gets credit of the yardage he gains from the moment he gains control of the pitched ball to the moment he gets tackled. He does not get credit for a reception though. All total yardage is counted as receiving yards and no rushing yards are gained by the either player. the QB gets credit for 1 completion and all total yardage gained by both players.
You need to be more specific. Total yardage in a single game? Total yardage in a season? Total yardage in a college career? And is it rushing yardage, passing yardage, kickoff yardage, puntyardage, kickoff-return yardage, punt-return yardage, total return yardage, or total yardage. If it's passing yardage, do you mean as a receiver or as a passer?Of course, I don't know the answer either way, and really, who cares? It's Division II. It could be a million yards, but whoever holds the record can't hold a candle to the average division I-A player. If they could, they would have played in Division I-A, or at least I-B.But if you want anyone to answer this question, you're going to have to be more precise in how you ask it.
The quarterback who threw for the most yardage in the 2009 season was Matt Schaub, then of the Houston Texans. His total yardage was 4,770 yards.
In the NFL, pass yardage is computed differently for team stats and for individual stats.For individual stats, the yardage is computed by determining where the play ends in relation to the line of scrimmage when the play began. If a forward pass is completed and the receiver is tackled downfield 15 yards from the line of scrimmage where the play began, the quarterback is credited with 15 passing yards. If a forward pass is completed and the receiver is tackled 3 yards behind the line of scrimmage where the play began, the quarterback is credited with -3 passing yards.For team stats, the above also applies. However, yardage lost to sacks is subtracted from a team's passing yardage total where it is not subtracted from a quarterback's passing yardage total. If, in a game, a quarterback throws for 250 yards and is sacked 2 times for 15 yards lost, the QB's passing yardage total will be 250 and the team's passing yardage total will be 235.
Brodie Croyle Brodie Croyle
Total = 10000(1+i)n Total = 10000(1.2321)2 Total = 12321 Change = interest gained = 12321 - 10000 = 2321
If you look at the total yardage per year, Adrian Peterson wins.
Yes.The Seahawks were credited with -7 total yards in the game against the Los Angeles Rams on November 4, 1979. They gained 23 yards rushing and -30 yards passing. They actually gained 25 yards passing but because NFL stats subtract yards lost on sacks from a team's total passing yards (and the Seahawks QB, Jim Zorn, was sacked 6 times for 55 yards lost) they were credited with a -30 in total passing yards.The -7 total yards is the NFL record for fewest in a game.The Seahawks lost the game, 24-0.
nothing it was a total accident and it was for not communicating
Total momentum in an isolated system does not change. The law of physics. The law of conservation of momentum explains that momentum is neither lost of gained. That means that there is a quantity, called momentum, that is conserved.
Energy is neither lost nor gained when it is transferred, according to the law of conservation of energy. Energy can change forms or be transferred from one object to another, but the total amount of energy remains constant. Some energy may be dissipated as heat or sound during the transfer process, but the total energy before and after remains the same.