First Number: 8
2nd Number: 2
(not the other way around)
Why:
8/2 = 4
8-2 = 6
Yes, when a number is divided by four, the quotient is 1/4 of the original number.
The quotient of the sum of a number and three, and four is seven
The quotient is 6.
An excellent example of an arithmetic sequence would be: 1, 5, 9, 13, 17, in which the numbers are going up by four, thus having a common difference of four. This fulfills the requirements of an arithmetic sequence - it must have a common difference between all numbers.
8 and 12
that would be 8 and 4 . :)
Write down four pairs of numbers with a quotient of 12.1.) 12 divided by 12.) 24 divided by 23.) 60 divided by 54.) 36 divided by 3
Yes, when a number is divided by four, the quotient is 1/4 of the original number.
The quotient of the sum of a number and three, and four is seven
The quotient is 6.
An excellent example of an arithmetic sequence would be: 1, 5, 9, 13, 17, in which the numbers are going up by four, thus having a common difference of four. This fulfills the requirements of an arithmetic sequence - it must have a common difference between all numbers.
It cannot be closed under the four basic operations (addition, subtraction, multiplication, division) because it is indeed possible to come up with two negative irrational numbers such that their sum/difference/product/quotient is a rational number, indicating that the set is not closed. You will have to think of a different operation.
8 and 12
1 and 17
111 is the average, as you would divide 444 by 4.
1500 and 6500....
There are an infinite number of groups of numbers whose sum, difference, product, quotient etc. is equal to 40 . But there are not four numbers that equal 40. In fact, there is only one number that equals 40. The number is . . . . . 40 .