Well you have to answer all the questions you can and then you have to look at all the answers you have and use them to work out the rest you have to look at the answers you have and work out what the other number is to work out all the numbers on the outside of the grid!
Hope I have helped you for tests and homework from now on!
Ed R
its done by hit n trial method or guess work............
The answer depends on which numbers are in the grid!
Divide the product by the factor[s] you know. The answer is the missing factor.
I'm not aware of a way to compare two numbers by multiplication.
You can find a missing denominator if you know something that the fraction is equal to. Then you can find the missing denominator through cross multiplication.
a multiplication grid looks like a box set of numbers where you multiply two numbers making each two numbers multiplied by making multiplication boxes
its done by hit n trial method or guess work............
Circle the numbers you've multiplied
A multiplication chart up to 100 typically consists of a grid with numbers 1 to 10 along both the horizontal and vertical axes. Each cell in the grid contains the product of the corresponding row and column numbers. This chart helps students visualize and quickly calculate multiplication facts up to 100, aiding in developing fluency and understanding of multiplication concepts.
column, grid, chinese
A multiplication chart is a grid that displays the product of multiplying two numbers. It typically ranges from 1 to 10 or 1 to 12 horizontally and vertically. Each cell in the chart contains the result of multiplying the number at the top of the column by the number at the beginning of the row. These charts are useful tools for learning multiplication facts and patterns.
The grid method is a way of teaching multiplication that is used in primary schools. Pupils move on from an array to the grid method. It is also used for teaching times tables.
The answer depends on which numbers are in the grid!
Divide the product by the factor[s] you know. The answer is the missing factor.
The Abelian or commutative property of the multiplication of numbers. It is important that both "multiplication" and "numbers" feature in the answer. Because, it is applicable to multiplication but not, for example, for division. It is applicable for the multiplication on numbers but not matrices.
I suppose you mean kenken. It is like sudoku but has 6 numbers instead of 9. I don't think there is a grid for that, but it used addition, subtraction, multiplication and division...to what I know. Numbers do not repeat in a row or column (similar to sudoku but there is no 3 by 3 grid, so thats one less restriction). Hope that's what you want.
factors * * * * * No, they are called multiplicands.