You can get 60 questions wrong, which leaves you with 140 answers correct, giving you 70%.
You can get 18 wrong.
To achieve an 80 percent score on a 75-question test, you need to answer at least 60 questions correctly (since 80% of 75 is 60). This means you can get a maximum of 15 questions wrong (75 total questions - 60 correct answers = 15 wrong).
If all questions are weighted the same, then you could miss 17 questions, or 26/43 correct, and get a 60 % assuming that there are no penalties for wrong answers.
The answer depends on how many of the ones that you do are correct and whether there are any penalties for wrong answers.
3/50 = 0,06 = 6 percent wrong, which means you get 100 - 6 = 94 % correct answers. Also it depends on how many you got wrong, so if you got 5 wrong you would get an 84.
24 wrong answers
You can get 18 wrong.
80% of 80 is 64 64 right answers right and 16 wrong answers
95% of the questions, provided there are no penalties for wrong answers.
1
To achieve an 80 percent score on a 75-question test, you need to answer at least 60 questions correctly (since 80% of 75 is 60). This means you can get a maximum of 15 questions wrong (75 total questions - 60 correct answers = 15 wrong).
80%=80/100 80/100 x 50 questions = 40 correct answers. therefore 50 - 40 = 10 incorrect answers.
You can get 20 questions wrong.
You can get 60 questions wrong and get a 70 percent but if you get 61 wrong you are at a 69.5 percent.
Oh, dude, you're hitting me with some math here. So, to get 80 percent on 75 questions, you'd need to get 60 questions right. That means you can get 15 questions wrong and still hit that 80 percent mark. So, like, you've got a little wiggle room there, but don't push it too far!
Each question is worth 2.5 percent. You can get 8 wrong.
If you get 7 wrong you'll get 23/30 = 76.66... % Not enough. So fewer than 7. But that is provided that wrong answers score 0 and do not have penalties.