To check an answer quotient with a remainder, you can use the formula: ( \text{Dividend} = (\text{Quotient} \times \text{Divisor}) + \text{Remainder} ). Multiply the quotient by the divisor, then add the remainder to that product. If the resulting value equals the original dividend, your answer is correct. This method confirms that both the quotient and the remainder are accurate.
The remainder of the quotient of 421 and 6 is 1.
Quotient 0, remainder 805. Note that you will always get this pattern when you divide a smaller number by a larger one - i.e., the quotient will be zero, and the remainder will be the dividend.
84.5
1.5647
26.1538
The answer is the remainder has a quotient of 14
Multiply the quotient times the dividend and then add on the remainder to the product.
Remainder 8, quotient 0.
The remainder of the quotient of 421 and 6 is 1.
Quotient 0, remainder 805. Note that you will always get this pattern when you divide a smaller number by a larger one - i.e., the quotient will be zero, and the remainder will be the dividend.
11 / 305: quotient = 0, remainder = 11
84.5
9.875
The quotient is 47 with a remainder of 1
The divisor is 9. quotient x divisor + remainder = dividend ⇒ quotient x divisor = dividend - remainder ⇒ divisor = (dividend - remainder) ÷ quotient = (53 - 8) ÷ 5 = 45 ÷ 5 = 9
Yes, certainly. A quotient is the result of division ( a divisor into a dividend). The remainder can be bigger than the quotient, but not bigger than the divisor. For example 130 divided by 20 =6 with remainder of 10. Here 6 is the quotient and remainder is 10, which is bigger than the quotient
810: quotient 1, remainder 1