No. 2 x 60 does not equal 5. It equals 120.
(3)(2)(2)5x=60 12(5x)=60 12(5x)/12=60/12 5x=5 x=1
The least common multiple (LCM) of 60 and 90 can be found by determining their prime factorization. The prime factorization of 60 is (2^2 \times 3^1 \times 5^1), and for 90, it is (2^1 \times 3^2 \times 5^1). The LCM is obtained by taking the highest power of each prime factor: (2^2), (3^2), and (5^1), which results in (2^2 \times 3^2 \times 5^1 = 180). Therefore, the LCM of 60 and 90 is 180.
There are 60 because 60 times 1/5 = 12
The expanded form of 5 times 162 can be expressed as (5 \times 162 = 5 \times (100 + 60 + 2)). This simplifies to (5 \times 100 + 5 \times 60 + 5 \times 2), which equals (500 + 300 + 10). Therefore, the expanded form is (500 + 300 + 10).
10 times -6 -10 times 6 20 times -3 -20 times 3 -12 times 5 12 times -5 -1 times 60 1 times -60 -2 times 30 2 times -30 -15 times 4 -4 times 15
2, 3, and 5 are prime factors of 60 2 times 2 times 3 times 5 = 60
2*2 = 4 * 3 = 12 * 5 = 60 * 5 = 300 * 7 = 2,100
324 ÷ 60 = 5 24/60 = 5 2/5 = 5.4
60/12 = 5 times. 60/12 = 5 times. 60/12 = 5 times. 60/12 = 5 times.
(3)(2)(2)5x=60 12(5x)=60 12(5x)/12=60/12 5x=5 x=1
5 times 3 times 2 times 2. Or 2 radical 15.
There are 60 because 60 times 1/5 = 12
The expanded form of 5 times 162 can be expressed as (5 \times 162 = 5 \times (100 + 60 + 2)). This simplifies to (5 \times 100 + 5 \times 60 + 5 \times 2), which equals (500 + 300 + 10). Therefore, the expanded form is (500 + 300 + 10).
10 times 6 = 60 or 12 times 5 = 60 pr 15 times 4 = 60 or 20 times 3 = 60 or 30 times 2 = 60
10 times -6 -10 times 6 20 times -3 -20 times 3 -12 times 5 12 times -5 -1 times 60 1 times -60 -2 times 30 2 times -30 -15 times 4 -4 times 15
It is: (2+10) times 5 = 60
60 will go into 168 two times with a remainder of 48. Written as a fraction, that is 2 48/60 In simplest terms, it is 2 4/5.