Imagine a round pie. Now slice the pie into twelve slices, as there are twelve hungry people wanting a slice of pie. Each slice is a twelfth of the whole pie.
64
5.42
You start of with a whole pie and if you cut in two equal pieces you have two half pies. If you cut the two half pie pieces in half you end up with 4 equal pieces of the original pie and these are called quarters. So to get a half you divide by 2 To get a quarter you divide by 4 Thus 12/4 = 3 or 4*3=12 Thus a quarter of 12 is 3.
Well, first of all, it's not pie, it's Pi. Pi times 10 equals 31.4159265897932384626433832795. You just slide the decimal point one digit to the right.
No, the formula for a circumference of a circle is 2(pie)r For example, if r is 6, the the circumference is 12(pie)
take pie times pie and times the diameter
pie times 3 = Gavin Preller rocks
It depends on how many slices are in the pie. If you cut the pie into 24 pieces, 12 slices will be half the pie, which will leave 12 slices, 6 could be blueberry and six could be strawberry. If there are a total of 12 slices in the pie, the three of the slices will be blueberry.
for the surface area:4 times pie times radius squared for volume:4/3 times pie times radius cubed
Cherry Pie costs 10 cents in the Colonial Times.
Pie=180 Degrees So its 3 times 180 which = 540 Then divide that by 2 = 270 So it = 270 Degrees
Imagine a round pie. Now slice the pie into twelve slices, as there are twelve hungry people wanting a slice of pie. Each slice is a twelfth of the whole pie.
10
A 9 inch pie should serve around 12 people.
If the pie is a normal circle, then an infinite number of times just like with cutting a circle in half. However, after a certain number of times, the pie will cease to have any structure and will fall apart.
Pie r2 is the formula needed to find out the area of a circle you have to square the radius of the circle (half the diameter of the circle) two times (btw square means times the number by it self) and times the answer by pie which is 3.14