There are four halves in two wholes. Each whole is made up of two halves, so when you multiply two wholes by two halves per whole, you get four halves in total.
You can make 3 wholes
1
3 x 2 = 6 halves
8
Each whole is two halves, so eight wholes are sixteen halves. Adding one half makes the total seventeen halves. Reducing this, of course, is simply eight and one-half.
There are twelve halves in six wholes. This is because each whole can be divided into two equal parts, making two halves. Therefore, six wholes would have a total of twelve halves.
There are 16 halves in eight wholes.
10 halves in 5 wholes.
You can make 4 wholes from 8 halves.
You can make 3 wholes
20
5 wholes = ten halves plus one half = 11 halves
1
twenty. Two halves make one whole. So in ten wholes there are 10 x 2 = 20 halves.
3 x 2 = 6 halves
When you have 11 halves, you can think of it as having 11 parts, each of which is half of a whole. To find out how many wholes that is, you would divide 11 by 2, since there are 2 halves in a whole. Therefore, 11 halves is equal to 5 wholes with 1 half remaining.
Six whole halves. Each whole has two halves making it, 6(wholes)x2(#of halves in whole)= 12. 12 halves in 6 wholes.