3 in each bag. You never said that you were suppose to have no balls left.
There is no answer for this question, because if all four of the bags have odd values then the total must be even. Any time you add an even number of odd numbers, your answer will be even. For example, 1 + 3 = 4 (even) 3 + 5 + 7 + 9 = 24 (even)
Oh, dude, that's easy! Just put 1 apple in the first bag, 3 in the second, 1 in the third, and 4 in the fourth. Voilà, each bag now has an odd number of apples. It's like apple math, but with a twist!
Well, honey, it's simple. You put 3 apples in each of the first three bags, leaving the last bag empty. Then, you put the remaining 3 apples in the last bag. Voila! Odd numbers of apples in each bag, just like you asked.
No. The opposite is true: the gcf of an odd number and an even number is always odd. All the factors of an odd number are odd; or to put it another way: If a number has an even factor, the number itself must be even. Thus the only common factors between odd and even numbers must be odd.
Nora has 54 oranges and wants to distribute them equally among 9 bags. To find out how many oranges should be in each bag, we divide the total number of oranges by the number of bags: 54 ÷ 9 = 6. Therefore, Nora needs 9 bags if she wants to put an equal number of oranges in each bag.
Put an odd number of cupcakes in each bag and keep out 1. Example: 1, 3, 5, 5 3, 3, 3, 5 You can't do it if you don't keep out an odd number of cupcakes. Any even number (the four bags) of odd numbers (cupcakes per bag) will give you an even number.
There is no answer for this question, because if all four of the bags have odd values then the total must be even. Any time you add an even number of odd numbers, your answer will be even. For example, 1 + 3 = 4 (even) 3 + 5 + 7 + 9 = 24 (even)
Put one in each bag. Then eat the rest.
Oh, dude, that's easy! Just put 1 apple in the first bag, 3 in the second, 1 in the third, and 4 in the fourth. Voilà, each bag now has an odd number of apples. It's like apple math, but with a twist!
Bake another batch
Well, honey, it's simple. You put 3 apples in each of the first three bags, leaving the last bag empty. Then, you put the remaining 3 apples in the last bag. Voila! Odd numbers of apples in each bag, just like you asked.
Shag bags are where practice balls are kept.
No. The opposite is true: the gcf of an odd number and an even number is always odd. All the factors of an odd number are odd; or to put it another way: If a number has an even factor, the number itself must be even. Thus the only common factors between odd and even numbers must be odd.
Easily put any number with a single odd number 1,3,5,7,9 in a three digit number. Like 113 the 3 and 1 makes it odd number or 223 the three makes it odd.
Nora has 54 oranges and wants to distribute them equally among 9 bags. To find out how many oranges should be in each bag, we divide the total number of oranges by the number of bags: 54 ÷ 9 = 6. Therefore, Nora needs 9 bags if she wants to put an equal number of oranges in each bag.
it's impossible because the sum of any two odd numbers equals an even number; odd# + odd# = even#. even# +even# = even#. odd# + odd# + odd# + odd# = even#.
you put 3 in one and 7 in the other cause 0 is a odd and a even number