The answer will depend on what test where, and and at what level.
Same as the Anonymous person
Percent decrease is when your overall percentage goes down. Example: I take a 4 problem math test and get one wrong, 75%. I take a 2 problem math test and get one wrong, 50%.
a math problem that may be on your local school test
If 20/50 questions were addition problems, this is equal to 2/5 or two fifths.
Keep working the problem until you solve it. Get some help if necessary, but not during a test!
The fraction of the number 15 and 25 would be 15/25. This is a math problem.
The answer will depend on what test: in which school or college, at what level.
The fraction is(the number of multiple-choice questions) / (the total number of questions on the test)I can't be any more specific be cause you've neglected to mention either ofthose numbers in the question.
Same as the Anonymous person
numbers,problem solving,formulas
pronoun (A+)
Percent decrease is when your overall percentage goes down. Example: I take a 4 problem math test and get one wrong, 75%. I take a 2 problem math test and get one wrong, 50%.
a math problem that may be on your local school test
Write your own math problems and solve them. You teach your parents what you are learning and that also helps you.
12/100; While yes, that is 12 hundredths as a fraction... If you wrote .12 as 12/100 on a math test, you'd be getting the problem wrong, because you didn't reduce it. 3/25 is much more accurate.
If 20/50 questions were addition problems, this is equal to 2/5 or two fifths.
10 4-point problems 4x10=40 3x20=60