Give them one whole, and one quarter cookie each !
Divide 2.5 by 4. 2.5 = 5/2; (5/2)/4 = 5/8 (possibly ask the pizza maker to divide each pizza into eighths).
10 to 4
49 divided by 5 is 9 with remainder 4
Oh, dude, you're hitting me with the math questions, huh? Well, 34 divided by 5 equals 6.8. So, like, if you had 34 cookies and you wanted to share them equally among 5 friends, each friend would get 6 whole cookies and one friend would just have to deal with getting a crumb.
0.8 crt/rbt
Oh, dude, like, 5 divided by 4 is, like, 1.25. So, if you have 5 cookies and you wanna share 'em equally among 4 friends, each friend gets 1.25 cookies. But, like, good luck cutting a cookie into quarters without making a mess!
how much a share? well when you share something you would play with something among 2 3 4 5 people etc or use it among 2 3 4 5 peole at a time
Alright, buckle up buttercup. Let's say you have 17 cookies and you want to share them equally among your 5 friends. After dividing, you realize each friend gets 3 cookies and you have 2 left over. Now, here's where the fun begins - you decide to give that extra 1 cookie to each friend to make it an even sweeter deal. So, you add 1 to the quotient of 3, making it 4 cookies per friend. Voilà, problem solved with a sprinkle of sass!
If you mean this as a math problem, first find the price of popcorn in terms of cookies: for Julia, popcorn=$5-(2*price of cookies) for Marvin, popcorn=$6-(4*price of cookies) Then set the equations equal to each other and solve for the price of cookies: $5-(2*price of cookies)=$6-(4*price of cookies) -2poc+4poc=$6-$5 2poc=$1 poc=$.50 Then enter the price of cookies into the popcorn equation to solve for the price of popcorn: popcorn=$5-(2*$.50)=$4 Therefore, the price of popcorn is $4 while the cookies cost $.50
20/4=5
To find out how much flour is needed for 5 dozen cookies, first determine the amount of flour per dozen. Since the recipe uses 4 cups of flour for 3 dozen cookies, that means it requires approximately 1.33 cups of flour per dozen (4 cups ÷ 3 dozen). For 5 dozen cookies, multiply 1.33 cups by 5, which equals about 6.67 cups of flour. Therefore, you will need approximately 6 and 2/3 cups of flour for 5 dozen cookies.
3
Catherine Share is 5' 4 1/2".
Oh, dude, a fifth of 20 is like 4. You know, because if you divide 20 by 5, you get 4. So, if you had 20 cookies and you wanted to share them equally among 5 friends, each friend would get 4 cookies. Math can be delicious sometimes, right?
They would get 7 each... and there would be 4 left over.
5 and 4 share no common factors aside from 1.
Divide 2.5 by 4. 2.5 = 5/2; (5/2)/4 = 5/8 (possibly ask the pizza maker to divide each pizza into eighths).