6
4,707 eggs
59 Boxes
Well, isn't that a lovely question! If each box holds two dozen pencils, that means each box has 24 pencils. So, if we have ten boxes, we can simply multiply 24 pencils by 10 boxes to find the total number of pencils. That would be 240 pencils in total! Just imagine all the beautiful drawings and happy little accidents you could create with all those pencils.
180
45
4,707 eggs
59 Boxes
70 Crates
40 boxes. 240/6 = 40
10,368
50 brown eggs 10 white eggs (5 brown eggs x 2 sets per dozen) x (5 boxes) = 50 brown eggs (1 white egg x 2 sets per dozen) x (5 boxes) = 10 white eggs
5400 eggs, 450 are broken, and 4950 are intact.
4509 divided by 12 = 375.75 or 375 boxes one box only three quarters full. So you would use 376 boxes.
Each sack holds about 100 or more. I hopes this help! :)
The number of eggs in 19 cartons depends on how many eggs are in each carton. Typically, a standard egg carton holds 12 eggs. Therefore, if each carton contains 12 eggs, then 19 cartons would contain 19 x 12 = 228 eggs.
260 boxes
Well, isn't that a lovely question! If each box holds two dozen pencils, that means each box has 24 pencils. So, if we have ten boxes, we can simply multiply 24 pencils by 10 boxes to find the total number of pencils. That would be 240 pencils in total! Just imagine all the beautiful drawings and happy little accidents you could create with all those pencils.