Oh, dude, seriously? Okay, so 1 meter is like 100 centimeters. And if you're cutting 25 cm lengths, you can totally get 4 of those bad boys from a meter. It's like basic math, man.
100 of them.
A 40 cm piece of string can be cut into eight 5 cm pieces.
66.6
7/1.4 = 5 lengths.
1 metre = 100 cm so 1.5 m = 100*1.5 = 150 cm. You can therefore cut 150/5 = 30 lengths.
You can cut 4 lengths of 25 centimeters each from 1 meter, because 1 meter is equivalent to 100 centimeters (1 meter = 100 cm) and 100 cm divided by 25 cm equals 4.
100 of them.
A 40 cm piece of string can be cut into eight 5 cm pieces.
1m = 100 cm so 3m = 300 cm300 cm/60 cm = 5 lengths.
18
66.6
7/1.4 = 5 lengths.
30
To calculate the number of 25-centimeter lengths that can be cut from a 4.5-meter rope, we first convert the length of the rope to centimeters. Since 1 meter is equal to 100 centimeters, 4.5 meters is equal to 450 centimeters. Then, we divide the total length of the rope (450 cm) by the length of each cut (25 cm) to find the number of cuts. Therefore, 450 cm / 25 cm = 18 cuts can be made from the 4.5-meter rope.
4 m / 10 cm = 400 cm / 10 cm = 40
2 m is 200 cm. So just divide 200 by 25 and there's your answer. Another way to look at it is, how many quarters (25 cents) in 2 bucks (200 cents)?
About 25