100
Multiply it backwards. 20 divided by 5 equals 4 4 times 5 equals 20
The division problem that equals 100 is 100 divided by 1, which equals 100. In division, the dividend (100) is divided by the divisor (1) to get the quotient (also 100). This is because division is the inverse operation of multiplication, and when dividing by 1, the quotient remains the same as the dividend.
16.4
12.4
100
Multiply it backwards. 20 divided by 5 equals 4 4 times 5 equals 20
3*5 = 15
54
It is: 1.25 times 4 = 5
No. Not without redefining division.
To find a division problem that equals five, we can use the equation 10 ÷ 2 = 5. This is because when we divide 10 by 2, the quotient is 5. Another example would be 15 ÷ 3 = 5, where dividing 15 by 3 also gives us the result of 5.
The division problem that equals 100 is 100 divided by 1, which equals 100. In division, the dividend (100) is divided by the divisor (1) to get the quotient (also 100). This is because division is the inverse operation of multiplication, and when dividing by 1, the quotient remains the same as the dividend.
That means that the answer has a quotient of 100 and a remainder of 2. For example, 502 ÷ 5 would have that answer.
5 times 5 divided by 5 times 0 equals infinity or undefined. Division by zero is undefined
16.4
30 = numerator or dividend 5 = denominator or divisor (and 6 = quotient)