1, 2, and 4 will divide into both 36 and 100 with zero remainder. They're called the "common factors" of 36 and 100.
The whole-number factors of 36 are 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 9, 12, 18, 36, and their negatives.
Yes it can. Divide both numbers by their greatest common factor.
2/36 = 1/18 = 0.055= 5.5% ( a percent is 1/100) To get percent divide numbers and multiply by 100
12 and any multiple of it like 24, 36, 48, 60 etc
1,2,3,4,6,9,12,18 and 36 are the only numbers that can divide evenly into 36.
to show that two numbers are divide we can add divisions sign between them so for an example if we have 36 divide by 96 we can write it as 36
1, 2, and 4 will divide into both 36 and 100 with zero remainder. They're called the "common factors" of 36 and 100.
Well honey, let me break it down for you. Out of those options, 9 is the odd one out that won't divide into 36 without a remainder. The rest of those numbers will slide right into 36 with no problem, but 9 is just too big for that party.
12. This is because you add the numbers and then divide by the amount of numbers to get an average. So here we add the numbers and divide the total by 3. 10+11+15 = 36. 36/3 = 12.
Well, darling, if you want to find the average of 6, 9, 10, and 11, you simply add them all up and divide by how many numbers there are. In this case, the total is 36, and since there are 4 numbers, you divide 36 by 4 to get an average of 9. Voilà!
36/90 To do this in your head, divide both numbers by 9 = 4/10 divide both by 2 = 2/5
The whole-number factors of 36 are 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 9, 12, 18, 36, and their negatives.
To find the average, we add all the numbers together and divide by the amount of numbers 36+59+62+21=178 4 numbers were added up so we divide by 4 178/4=44.5 So the average is 44.5
Because 24 does not divide exactly into 36 ! For any number to be a factor of another number - it must divide exactly into it with no remainder. The same applies to GCF
divide both numbers by 12, and you get 3/4
Yes it can. Divide both numbers by their greatest common factor.