A unit rate is a rate that has a denominator of 1. Examples of unit rates include unit cost, gas, mileage and speed
Non-examples of unit rates include scenarios where the quantities being compared do not have a consistent ratio per single unit. For instance, if a car travels 300 miles in 5 hours, the average speed is not a unit rate unless expressed as miles per hour. Similarly, if a recipe calls for 3 cups of flour to make 12 cookies, the ratio is not a unit rate because it doesn't represent a single unit comparison, such as cups of flour per cookie.
To find the unit rate, divide the total cost by the number of items. If 10 pencils cost $2.00, the unit rate is $2.00 ÷ 10 pencils = $0.20 per pencil. Therefore, the unit rate is $0.20 per pencil.
To find the unit rate, divide the total number of tickets by the total cost. In this case, the cost for 15 tickets is $420, so the unit rate is $420 ÷ 15 tickets = $28 per ticket. Therefore, the unit rate is $28 per ticket.
125 ÷ 4 = 31.25
1 cookie per 0.20
Well a unit rate is a rate of per one. So if say you get 4 cookies per two packets. The unit rate would be 2 cookies per packet or 2 cookies/packet
30 cookies for $6.45, because the unit price per cookie is lower
a unit rate that gives you the cost....... maybe
A unit rate is a rate that has a denominator of 1. Examples of unit rates include unit cost, gas, mileage and speed
Marginal product is the result of an additional output of production. An example is adding an hour to an employeeâ??s work schedule to produce 100 more cookies. Marginal cost is the cost associated with producing an additional output. An example is paying an employee the overtime rate per hour for producing 100 more cookies.
A unit rate is a rate that has a denominator of 1. Examples of unit rates include unit cost, gas, mileage and speed
Imagine you have 20 objects at a cost of $90. Then the unit rate (the cost of one object) will be found by division. here $90 ÷ 20 = $4.50 (the unit price)
125 ÷ 4 = 31.25
Dollars per gallon, because the dependent quantity is the dollars
the rate is somthing is the percentage unit of the coast so when u multiply the a squared by the variable y theen u check it :)
the rate is somthing is the percentage unit of the coast so when u multiply the a squared by the variable y theen u check it :)