2.15. apples each
Easy peasy lemon squeezy! You tell one person to take a hike because there ain't enough apples to go around. Then you give 10 apples to the remaining 11 people, leaving one apple for you to enjoy while you watch them fight over the rest. Voilà, problem solved!
In a math word problem, "each" typically refers to a quantity that is being distributed equally among a certain number of items or individuals. For example, if there are 12 apples and they are to be shared equally among 4 people, then each person would receive 3 apples. "Each" helps specify the individual portion or share of the total quantity in the problem. It is important to carefully consider the context of the word problem to accurately interpret the meaning of "each" in the given scenario.
She can make 12 packs.
12 apples
If not a trick question, then 3.
2.15. apples each
You will get the answer by subtracting 60- 12. I will not share the answer so figure it out yourself. I was just sharing what you are supposed to do. Type in the chat below!
Easy peasy lemon squeezy! You tell one person to take a hike because there ain't enough apples to go around. Then you give 10 apples to the remaining 11 people, leaving one apple for you to enjoy while you watch them fight over the rest. Voilà, problem solved!
In a math word problem, "each" typically refers to a quantity that is being distributed equally among a certain number of items or individuals. For example, if there are 12 apples and they are to be shared equally among 4 people, then each person would receive 3 apples. "Each" helps specify the individual portion or share of the total quantity in the problem. It is important to carefully consider the context of the word problem to accurately interpret the meaning of "each" in the given scenario.
let x =oranges let x+12= apples total in basket=36 (x) + (x+12)= 36 2x +12= 36 -12 -12 -------------------- 2x = 24 --- ------ 2 2 ------------- x=12 therefore: there are 12 oranges (x+12)= apples 12+12=24 apples Ans: 24 apples
There were 252 Kit Kats and 21 kids. If each kid wanted an equal share, how many Kit Kats would each kid get?
Johnny has 12 apples. Johnny has 12 friends for some reason Johnnys friends give him 12 apples each How many apples would Johnnys friends have before giving them to Johnny? If they each have 12 apples, that would be 12 X 12. But Johnny already had 12 apples So your equation would be…… 12 + 12 X 12 Remember order of operations or you’ll get this wrong. (answer is 156) One problem though. The question did not specify whether Johnny got 12 apples from all of his friends, or each of his friends (eg. 1 x 12 vs 12 x 12) but I just went w/ the latter as it seemed more common idrk
She can make 12 packs.
13.5
If Person A has 12 apples and Person B has 12 apples, they both "each" have 12 apples. Total together, they have 24 apples.
Billy has X apples Ellen has X+2 apples There are 12 apples So ... X + (x+2) = 12 2x + 2 = 12 2x = 10 therefore x=5 so Ellen has 7 apples