10+c
Yes. The remainder cannot be more that the divisor but there is no issue with it being greater than the quotient. For example, if you divide 5 by 3, 5/3 = 1 and remainder 2 (out of 3) So you get quotient = 1, remainder = 2.
probably...................(n+3) -------- 4
3/10 = 0.3
10 + (n/-2) = 3 If a sentence uses "more than", it is referring to addition. If it says "the quotient of ____ and ____", then it is the first number divided by the second one. "Is" is the same as "equals".
2.5 more than the quotient of h and 3 is w
(n/-2) + 10 = 3
10+c 3
n/10+8
Yes. The remainder cannot be more that the divisor but there is no issue with it being greater than the quotient. For example, if you divide 5 by 3, 5/3 = 1 and remainder 2 (out of 3) So you get quotient = 1, remainder = 2.
probably...................(n+3) -------- 4
3/10 = 0.3
10 + (n/-2) = 3 If a sentence uses "more than", it is referring to addition. If it says "the quotient of ____ and ____", then it is the first number divided by the second one. "Is" is the same as "equals".
The quotient of a number and 3 decreased by 5 is almost 10". Match the statement with the inequality. 2/3-5 greater than equal to 10 3x-5 less than equal to 10 x/3 -5 less than equal to 10 3x-5 greater than 10
The quotient obtained from 3/10 divided by 4/5 is 3/8.
x/(10-5) = 3 x/5 = 3 x = 3*5 = 15
2 divided by 3 + x.
2.5 more than the quotient of h and 3 is w