Kortneyy lovess you!
haha you thought this was going to be an answer to your problem.
I provedd you worng.
Now you know how i feel when people don't get what they want
or when you know how to do something but they don't(:
1
n = x/64 + 48
let X = number quotient = x/4 x/4 + 9 = 12 x/4 = 3 x = 12
It is the equation: x/9 + 7 = 5
1 more than the quotient of 21 and b (This answer sucks)
4 + (x/3) >= x
(x/3) + 4 (> or =) 9x/3 (> or =) 5x (> or =) 15'x' is at least 15
Expressed as a formula, this is equal to 30/x + 4.
Let N = a number N (division sign) 3 + 4 = 11
A quotient is the result of a division sum between two or more numbers. You cannot have a quotient of a single number.
4 + x/3 ≥ 9 x/3 ≥ 5 x ≥ 15
1
X / ( y + 4 )
7 more than the quotient of a number n and 4 is 9
Yes. The quotient of two non-zero integers is a rational number.
The 'division' operation ... the one that produces a 'quotient' ... is an operation that's carried out with two numbers. The twentieth composite number is 30 . With one more number, and your instructions designating which one is the divisor, I'll find the quotient for you.
6/n + 2