Yes, although it does not specify 15 WHAT per hour. [Run] 15 miles per hour or [make] 15 dollars per hour or [manufacture] 15 widgets an hour. To that extent, it is not a unit rate.
7.5 degrees per hour.
7.5 degrees per hour
15 minutes = 1/4 hours 2 pints = 1/2 quart So 12 pints per 15 munites = 4*4 = 16 pints per hour = 16/2 = 8 quarts per hour.
1 hour = 3600 seconds. 15 cents per second = 15*3600 cents per hour = 15*36 dollars per hour = 540 dollars
Units produced per hour divided by number of men. example: 15 units produced per hour by 5 men = 15/5 = 3 units per man-hour. If 15 units were produced per hour by only 3 men, the efficiency is better and it will become 15/3 = 5 units per man-hour.
15 dollars/hour is the unit rate
Yes, it is.
15 / 50 = 0.3 feet per hour
7.5 degrees per hour.
7.5 degrees per hour
It is: 225/15 = $15 per hour
about 15 gallons per hour
To find the unit rate, divide the total number of tickets by the total cost. In this case, the cost for 15 tickets is $420, so the unit rate is $420 ÷ 15 tickets = $28 per ticket. Therefore, the unit rate is $28 per ticket.
The rate at which the lit portion of the moon moves per hour changes with latitude. The formula for finding the average rate of rotation per hour is: 15°cos(latitude). At the equator the equation would be 15°cos(0°)= 15° per hour.
A car has traveled 195 miles in 3 hours. Find the unit rate.
The new pay rate after the raise will be $15.41 per hour.
32 - 15 = 17 per hour