A rate is a ratio of two quantities: miles per hour, calories per cookie, dollars per person, ... a unit rate just specifies the units (miles, hours) of the two quantities.
A banana is a very good example of a nonexample. It has nothing whatsoever to do with rates, and so nothing to do with unit rates.
Divide the number of miles by the number of hours to obtain the unit rate. You should get: 128 miles / 2 hours = 64 miles per hour
30 miles per hour.
50 over 1
You're question is unclear. Most rates are unit rates. Miles per hour implies 1 hour which is a unit (1) rate.
A rate is a ratio of two quantities: miles per hour, calories per cookie, dollars per person, ... a unit rate just specifies the units (miles, hours) of the two quantities.
The following is the answer.
When rates are expressed as a quantity of 1, such as 2 feet per second or 5 miles per hour, they are called unit rates. If you have a multiple-unit rate such as 120 students for every 3 buses, and want to find the single-unit rate, write a ratio equal to the multiple-unit rate with 1 as the second term.
Unit rate is a rate with a denominator of one unit. :) :) :)
Unit Rates ... Is the rate for one unit of a given quantity. Unit means one .
For one form of unit rates it is 1.
a unit rate is when it is in simplest form
a unit rate is a mathematical term refering to how much or how many to a unit of 1. that was kind of confusing so let me give you an example. if you drove a total of 55 miles in 2 hours. the unit rate would be how many miles you drove in 1 hour, or 1 minute depending on the question.EXP: your on vacation and your family drove 55 miles in to hours. how many miles did you drive in 1 hour.55 divided by 2 = 27.52 divided by 2 = 1 unit rate = 27.5 over 1divide by the denominator
A unit rate is a rate that has a denominator of 1. Examples of unit rates include unit cost, gas, mileage and speed
Unit rate, slope, and rate of change are different names for the same thing. Unit rates and slopes (if they are constant) are the same thing as a constant rate of change.
The second number in a unit rate is usually 1, although it can be the first.