The answer is 54. Simply add the numbers together like you would for two plus two. To check your work, a calculator is the best option.
then 4 plus 3 equals 28 and 3 plus 3 equals 18 and 7 plus 5 equals 84 .... its easy you just have to multiply the answer with the first number.. for example : 2 plus 3 equals 5 but when you multiply the answer with the first number (2) it becomes equals 10, and so on the others..
By listed sequence, it is 5 plus 10 = 15 divided by 5 equals 3. By order of operations, it is 5 + (10/5) = 5 + 2 equals 7.
Since 2 plus 4 is not 10, the "if" statement is false. Given a false "if", logically, 9 + 2 can equal anything you like.
2 plus 3 equals 5 7 plus 2 equals 9 6 plus 9 equals 15 8 plus 4 equals 12 9 plus 7 equals 16 Am I missing something here? Probably. You say 2+3=5, but the question clearly states 2+3=10. Why would it say that? Suppose you had only one hand. You count 1,2,3,4,5,10,11,12. That last doesn't mean "twelve" as we know it, Jim. It means one hand (5), plus 2 spare ones. We could say: if 2+3=10, 5+2=12.
2+3 = 5 * 2 = 10. 7+2 = 9 * 7 = 63.6+5 = 11 * 6 = 66.x+y = z * x = n.9+7 = 16 * 9 = 144
It equals 10
5 plus 25 equals 60. Need to solve for 5 plus 25 equals ?: 2 plus 10 equals 24 is equivalent to 2 × (1 plus 5) equals 2 × (12); and 3 plus 15 equals 36 is equivalent to 3 ×(1 plus 5) equals 3 × (12); thus 5 plus 25 equals ? is equivalent to 5 × (1 plus 5) equals 5 × (12); thus ? = 5 × 12 = 60.
then 4 plus 3 equals 28 and 3 plus 3 equals 18 and 7 plus 5 equals 84 .... its easy you just have to multiply the answer with the first number.. for example : 2 plus 3 equals 5 but when you multiply the answer with the first number (2) it becomes equals 10, and so on the others..
By listed sequence, it is 5 plus 10 = 15 divided by 5 equals 3. By order of operations, it is 5 + (10/5) = 5 + 2 equals 7.
96
144
26
Since 2 plus 4 is not 10, the "if" statement is false. Given a false "if", logically, 9 + 2 can equal anything you like.
144 This works if you first add the two digits (ex. 2+3=5), then multiply the first digit by the answer you got (2+5=10).
2 plus 3 equals 5 7 plus 2 equals 9 6 plus 9 equals 15 8 plus 4 equals 12 9 plus 7 equals 16 Am I missing something here? Probably. You say 2+3=5, but the question clearly states 2+3=10. Why would it say that? Suppose you had only one hand. You count 1,2,3,4,5,10,11,12. That last doesn't mean "twelve" as we know it, Jim. It means one hand (5), plus 2 spare ones. We could say: if 2+3=10, 5+2=12.
2+2+2+10+5+5+5+20+20+20+20+20+20=151
144