29/30 questions correct = 96.6667 percent, which is exactly 96 2/3%
One question is worth about 4 points. So if you missed 6 that is about 24 points off. So you would get about a 76%.
To score 1 wrong on a 40-question test, you need to answer 39 questions correctly. This means you would have to know the material well and only make one mistake, whether due to a misreading of a question, a momentary lapse in knowledge, or second-guessing an answer. Your score would then be calculated as 39 out of 40, resulting in a high percentage.
To score a 40 on a 66-question test, you need to determine the minimum number of questions you can miss. Assuming each question is worth one point, you would need to answer at least 40 questions correctly. Therefore, you can miss up to 26 questions (66 total questions - 40 correct answers = 26 missed questions).
A score is equal to 20, so one less than a score would be 19.
One less than a score is nineteen.
One question is worth about 4 points. So if you missed 6 that is about 24 points off. So you would get about a 76%.
A very small number, less than 1% (you can actually miss several questions and still get a perfect 36).
To score 1 wrong on a 40-question test, you need to answer 39 questions correctly. This means you would have to know the material well and only make one mistake, whether due to a misreading of a question, a momentary lapse in knowledge, or second-guessing an answer. Your score would then be calculated as 39 out of 40, resulting in a high percentage.
One percent or less of all participants receive a score of 36 on the ACT.
1 wrong out of 200 means 199 correct. So 100*199/200 % = 99.5 % correct. The percentage score depends on whether all questions carry the same mark, whether or not there is a penalty for a wrong answer.
yes, his first game as an nba player he did not score. he took one shot and missed it.
17 out of 81; around 21%, which is an F in most grading systems.
Either of those could be used, depending upon what you are trying to say. For example, you have a test that is supposed to contain 20 questions but it actually has only 19 questions; there is a missing question. You take a test and answer every question correctly except for one; you have a missed question.
If you got 96 percent on a 25-question test, you missed one question. To find this, you can multiply 25 by 0.96 to get 24, which means you answered 24 questions correctly. Subtracting this from the total number of questions (25) gives you the number of questions missed, which is 1.
"Score" is not a measure of time. It is a measure of quantity. Thus the question is imprecise and cannot be answered without more information. A "score" is equal to 20 So the question amounts to asking "How long is 20?" 20 what? Years? Weeks? Days? Minutes? One score years = 20 years two score years = 40 years and so on.
The cosigner's credit score is used. They are the one responsible if the primary signer defaults on payment. Both credits are ruined if the car payment is missed. Be very careful of who you sign for!
You answered your own question, the scoring model they use is your FICO score, not your FAKO score which it is called when you purchase your score from one of the big 3, that scoring model is called Advantage.