Let N = a number
N (division sign) 3 + 4 = 11
the quotient of twice a number and six is.... 2x/6 four less than three times the same number is .... 3x-4 So the equation would be 2x/6=3x-4
(x/3) + 4 (> or =) 9x/3 (> or =) 5x (> or =) 15'x' is at least 15
In Chile they speak Spanish. "Number four" can be translated as "número cuatro".
1-n/4=2
Expressed as a formula, this is equal to 30/x + 4.
the quotient of twice a number and six is.... 2x/6 four less than three times the same number is .... 3x-4 So the equation would be 2x/6=3x-4
40
(x/3) + 4 (> or =) 9x/3 (> or =) 5x (> or =) 15'x' is at least 15
X/4-5
5.004
11
In Chile they speak Spanish. "Number four" can be translated as "número cuatro".
Yes, when a number is divided by four, the quotient is 1/4 of the original number.
n (number) minus four ----->n-4
4(y-3)=-1
8/4 = 2 or 4/2 = 2
Yes, but the quotient will not always be an integer.