Yes, the cost of a cab in New York City typically remains the same regardless of whether one or two people are riding. The fare is based on distance and time, not the number of passengers. However, additional fees may apply for extra stops or large groups requiring more space, but for standard trips, the price is the same for one or two passengers.
If 12 people rent the boat, it will cost each of them $r. If eight more people, for a total of 20, rent the boat for the same total price, it will cost each of them $(r-2.50). So, 12r = 20(r-2.50) 12r = 20r - 50 50 = 8r r = 6.25 The total cost to rent the boat is 12 x 6.25 = 75. Double-check: 75 ÷ 20 = 3.75 which is 2.50 less than 6.25.
To identify a person uniquely and avoid confusion when several people share the same or nearly the same name.
For the chance to be at least 50% that two people share the same birthday, there needs to be 22 people. For the chance to be exactly 100% that two people share the same birthday, there needs to be 366 people. If there was 365 people, there would be a very small chance that each person in the room would have different birthdays. With 366 people, there are not enough individual days for every person to have a different birthday, so there has to be at least one pair.
Perhaps 9,900 As in you shake with 99 other people, then the next person does the same. So each of the 100 people do 99 shakes. 99 x 100 = 9,900
It does the same thing that the height of a person does . . . it provides a way to describe the circle to other people without drawing a picture.
Depends on where you live. The cost of living is not the same everywhere. To get a answer on your question you need to give a city or area.
A person who lives in the same city as you is commonly referred to as a "fellow resident" or simply a "neighbor."
Here is an example: If the price is $50 per person, per night, based on double occupancy, it means that the room is meant for 2 people, and that each person will pay $50, therefore the total cost for the room sleeping 2 people, is $100. Usually, single occupancy is almost double the per person cost of double occupancy: The same room that cost 2 people $100 will cost 1 person $100. The principle is for the hotel to sell the room at a minimum cost, therefore, 2 people stay cheaper than 1.
Yes, both working in the same city and country.
yes
"It depends on the person getting the coverage. As a lot of different variables end up making the final cost for a person, no two coverages will cost the same."
Cost and benefits are subjective
You can call them a fellow resident or a neighbor.
yes even if you live in the same city. nothing is free
1 pence
Yes. They are the same person. I find it hard to believe that people are doughting this
Hotel prices are typically per room, not per person. This means that the cost of the room is the same whether one person or multiple people are staying in it. Additional charges may apply for extra guests or amenities.