8
Six whole halves. Each whole has two halves making it, 6(wholes)x2(#of halves in whole)= 12. 12 halves in 6 wholes.
2 halves make a whole
There are two halves in a whole. If you multiply 2 by 10 you get the answer 20.
twenty. Two halves make one whole. So in ten wholes there are 10 x 2 = 20 halves.
8
Six whole halves. Each whole has two halves making it, 6(wholes)x2(#of halves in whole)= 12. 12 halves in 6 wholes.
2 halves make a whole
2
There are two halves in a whole. If you multiply 2 by 10 you get the answer 20.
twenty. Two halves make one whole. So in ten wholes there are 10 x 2 = 20 halves.
4.
9
Well, darling, if we're talking about cutting those two whole ones in half, you'd end up with four halves. But if you're asking how many halves are in two whole ones without cutting them, then the answer is simply two halves. Math can be a real hoot, can't it?
There are only 2 halves to any number. If you mean how many halves are in 4 wholes: Since there are 2 halves to a whole, you multiply 2 x 4, which gives you a total of 8 halves in 4 wholes.
2
2