Four hundred fifty eight.
8 tens and 4 one
14 and 8 units
No, you do not need to regroup when subtracting 365 - 148. You can subtract the numbers directly in each place value: 5 - 8 requires borrowing, but 6 - 4 and 3 - 1 can be done without regrouping. The final answer is 217.
The only whole number that evenly divides 5, 4, and 8 is ' 1 '.
It is a number sequence.
4/-3 8
what is the missing number: 4, 5, 8, 17, 44
x-4=8+x/5 5(x-4)=5(8+x/5) 5x-20=8+x 4x=28 x=7
14 and 8 units
8 tens and 4 one
No, you do not need to regroup when subtracting 365 - 148. You can subtract the numbers directly in each place value: 5 - 8 requires borrowing, but 6 - 4 and 3 - 1 can be done without regrouping. The final answer is 217.
The only whole number that evenly divides 5, 4, and 8 is ' 1 '.
It is a number sequence.
well, no number goes int 5 or 7 that can also go into 8 or 4.
"Regrouping" is a more modern word for "borrowing". When subtracting with decimals, if you are trying to subtract a larger digit from a smaller digit, you "regroup" the next digit to the left by taking one away from it and adding 10 to the number you are subtracting from. Example 84 - 19 _____ You can't subtract 9 from 4, so you take one away from the next digit over (the 8) and add 10 to the 4. 14 - 9 is 5 in the ones digits 7 - 1 is 6 in the tens digits Now if you are subtracting mixed numbers, the regrouping process is essentially the same, except that instead of always regrouping by tens, we regroup by the denominator size. 8 1/5 - 3 3/5 ______ We can't subtract 3/5 from 1/5, so we regroup one unit from the 8 into 5 fifths. 7 6/5 -3 3/5 _______ 4 3/5 It is very easy when you get some practice doing it.
4, 4+4=8-5=3
37*4 = 148 which is 14 tens and 8 units