The answer is eight, this is how I worked it out...
2 dozen = 24
1/3 of 24 = 8
One third of one dozen is 4/12
A dozen is equal to 12, so 2/3 of a dozen is the same as 12x2/3 = 8
one dozen is 12 one third of 12 is 12 divided by 3. That = 4. So 2 thirds is 4 multiplied by 2 = 8. two thirds of one dozen is 8
Two and a half dozen is equal to 30. Each dozen is 12, and a half a dozen is 6, so the equation you can use to figure that out is 12 x 2 + 6 = 30.
One third divided by two and one third = 1/7
8 is one third (1/3) of two dozen (12).
One third of one dozen is 4/12
A dozen is equal to 12, so 2/3 of a dozen is the same as 12x2/3 = 8
one dozen is 12 one third of 12 is 12 divided by 3. That = 4. So 2 thirds is 4 multiplied by 2 = 8. two thirds of one dozen is 8
2 and a third dozen. 2 and two thirteenth bakers dozen. a dozen is twleve a bakers dozen is 13
One dozen equals 12. Two dozen equals 24.
One dozen equals 12, so two dozen would be 24. 24+24=48
Common phrases that use numbers include "a dime a dozen," which means something is very common or inexpensive, and "two heads are better than one," emphasizing the value of collaboration. Another example is "six of one, half a dozen of the other," indicating that two options are essentially the same. Additionally, "third time's the charm" suggests that after two failures, success is likely with a third attempt.
There would be 12. 12 is a dozen
Two and a half dozen is equal to 30. Each dozen is 12, and a half a dozen is 6, so the equation you can use to figure that out is 12 x 2 + 6 = 30.
One. Fred, the third boy.
One third divided by two and one third = 1/7