1 ticket = 7
16 tickets = 7 x 16 = 112
5 tickets per student
idk
Imagine you have 20 objects at a cost of $90. Then the unit rate (the cost of one object) will be found by division. here $90 ÷ 20 = $4.50 (the unit price)
Dollars per gallon, because the dependent quantity is the dollars
24
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.
($63.75/15) = $4.25$4.25 per ticket
4 dollars per ticket or 0.25 tickets per dollar.
Answer = use division as follows: 420$ / 15 tickets = 28$ / 1 ticket (read aloud as 28 dollars per ticket)
To get the unit rate, divide the total money by the amount of tickets in this case.
3.75 ÷ 5 = 0.75 Therefore, if dealing in British Sterling (£): each ticket is worth 75p (seventy-five pence).
5 tickets per student
a unit rate that gives you the cost....... maybe
5/8
idk
A unit rate is a rate that has a denominator of 1. Examples of unit rates include unit cost, gas, mileage and speed
A unit rate is a rate that has a denominator of 1. Examples of unit rates include unit cost, gas, mileage and speed