To share 54 in the ratio of W, you first need to determine the total parts of the ratio. If W represents a specific number, you would calculate the total parts by adding W to any other parts in the ratio. Then, divide 54 by the total parts to find the value of each part and multiply that by W to find the share corresponding to W. For example, if the ratio is W:1, the total parts would be W + 1, and each part would be 54 divided by that total.
The ratio between ( w ) and 60 is expressed as ( \frac{w}{60} ). This ratio indicates how many times 60 fits into ( w ) or how ( w ) compares to 60. To find a specific numerical value for the ratio, you would need a specific value for ( w ).
It is 1 : 1.
W/c .4/5
The ratio of width to length is 34, so W = 34*L The area of a rectangle is L * W, so using the ratio we get L * 34*L = 108 cm2 34*L2 = 108 L = SQRT (108/34) = 1.78 cm W = 60.6 cm
To find the shadow of a w-foot tree, you can use the ratio of the person's height to their shadow. If a 5-foot person has an 8-foot shadow, the ratio is 5/8. Therefore, the shadow of a w-foot tree can be calculated using the formula: Shadow of tree = (w/5) * 8.
24.357 is twenty-four and three hundred fifty-seven thousandths.
It is w:9 or w/9
It is 1 : 1.
Water cement ratio is defined as the indicator of strength is the ratio of water used compared to the amount of cement.Lower the W/C ratio, higher will be the strength.A minimum of W/C ratio 0.3 should be adopted.
George W. Bush
W. E. Howard has written: 'Fifty years' cricket reminiscences of a non-player'
final axle ratio 3.55
The tile W is worth four points in Scrabble.
around 54 or 54 dollars w/tax
simply workabilty is the w/c ratio in concrete. more the w/c ratio higher the workability and vice versa. and it is true that excess amount of w/c ratio doesnt give proper strength. so workable concrete i.e, concrete with proper w/c is must for good strength. *note: not considering the mix of concrete.
G. W. Furness has written: 'The farmer's share'
Neil W. Carothers has written: 'The fifty-cent dollar' -- subject(s): Accessible book