Any number below 6 has a quotient less than 1.
There can be no reason because your assertion is not true.For example, 1/6 and 1/2 are both fractions less than one. But their quotient is (1/6)/(1/2) = (1/6)*(2/1) = 2/6 = 1/3. And that is not more than 1/2.
n/6 - 8 = -14 n/6 = -6 n = -36
7
Do you mean h/2 -6 = 10 if so then the value of h is 32
6 less than the quotient of 36 and 4? this means that 36 divided by 4 =9 now 6 less then 9 is 9-6 =3 so your answer = 3
24/6 = 4 and 24/4 = 6, therefore 24 divided by 4 is the bigger quotient.
Any number below 6 has a quotient less than 1.
The quotient is the result of dividing two numbers. So 3 doesn't have a quotient unless another number is being involved in the division. The 4 is not that number since it is substracted from the quotient you get afterwards. Examples: 4 less than the quotient of 9 and 3 would be -1 (9/3=3; 3-4=-1) 4 less than the quotient of 6 and 3 would be -2 (6/3=2; 2-4 = -2)
There can be no reason because your assertion is not true.For example, 1/6 and 1/2 are both fractions less than one. But their quotient is (1/6)/(1/2) = (1/6)*(2/1) = 2/6 = 1/3. And that is not more than 1/2.
n/6 - 8 = -14 n/6 = -6 n = -36
the quotient of twice a number and six is.... 2x/6 four less than three times the same number is .... 3x-4 So the equation would be 2x/6=3x-4
yes; e.g. 1/6 / 1/3 = 1/2
Yes, certainly. A quotient is the result of division ( a divisor into a dividend). The remainder can be bigger than the quotient, but not bigger than the divisor. For example 130 divided by 20 =6 with remainder of 10. Here 6 is the quotient and remainder is 10, which is bigger than the quotient
7
2n/6 - 9 or n/3 - 9
Well, let's break this down nice and easy. First, we find the quotient of a number and 8 by dividing the number by 8. Then we subtract that quotient from 11 to find the answer. Remember, mistakes are just happy little accidents on our journey to the right solution.