A 40 cm piece of string can be cut into eight 5 cm pieces.
4, you got to be young to not get this,
2
100 of them.
TEN of course !
There can be 5 pieces.
Five lengths because 7/1.4 = 5
To find the lengths of the two pieces, you first need to find the total number of parts in the ratio, which is 7+2=9 parts. Then, divide the total length of the original timber by the total number of parts to find the length of one part: 828 cm / 9 = 92 cm per part. Finally, multiply the length of the larger part (7 parts) by the length of one part to find the length of the larger cut: 7 parts * 92 cm = 644 cm. Therefore, the larger cut length is 644 cm.
Five pieces because 7/1.4 = 5
A 40 cm piece of string can be cut into eight 5 cm pieces.
You can cut 11 lengths of 25cm from 280cm.
Yes.
4, you got to be young to not get this,
2
81
piece a has a greater length than piece b (a>b)
The answer is 5.