7 subtracted from the quotient of a number and 2 is a -6
16x/6
24/6 = 4^3 = 64
6x/23
0.5
n+7/6
6/(n +3)
6 + (the quotient of a number and 4) =6 + (number ÷ 4)=6 + (N÷4) =⁶/₁ + ⁿ/₄ =²⁴/₄ + ⁿ/₄ =²⁴ⁿ/₄ =24n ÷ 4 =6n ÷ 1 =6n
7 subtracted from the quotient of a number and 2 is a -6
Let the number to be found is N. Use Order of Operations. So first do the quotient part: 'the quotient of a number and 6' means N/6. '4 more than' means 4 + N/6, and then it equals 40, so4 + N/6 = 40N/6 = 36N = 216
The algebraic expression for "twice a number" would be 2x, where x represents the unknown number. To find the quotient of 2x and 6, you would divide 2x by 6, which simplifies to (2x) / 6. This can be further simplified to x / 3, which represents the final quotient of twice a number and 6 in algebraic expression.
40
No. When you divide a number by another number, let's say 26/4, you can't always get a perfect number. In this case, 6*4 is 24, and you have 2 "remainder", or 2 left over. The quotient is the whole answer, in this case 6 remainder 2. So the remainder is part of the quotient, but not the whole quotient itself.
x/4 - 6 = 22 x/4 = 28 x = 112
The quotient is the result of dividing two numbers. So 3 doesn't have a quotient unless another number is being involved in the division. The 4 is not that number since it is substracted from the quotient you get afterwards. Examples: 4 less than the quotient of 9 and 3 would be -1 (9/3=3; 3-4=-1) 4 less than the quotient of 6 and 3 would be -2 (6/3=2; 2-4 = -2)
Explanation: Quotient means that you divide something by another. Let's let n be the "number". Therefore, "a quotient of a number and 6" refers to n 6 or n Γ· 6 .
the quotient of a number plus 6 and 3 is d+3=d+6