It is: 2 and 1/3 minus 2/5 = 29/15 or 1 and 14/15
One whole and two fifths
To find out how many one-fifths are in 7 wholes, you can multiply 7 by 5, because each whole contains 5 one-fifths. Thus, 7 wholes contain ( 7 \times 5 = 35 ) one-fifths. Therefore, there are 35 one-fifths in 7 wholes.
We can convert into seventy-fifths. 6 and nine seventy-fifths minus twenty-five seventy-fifths equals negative 6 and thirty-four seventy-fifths.
35 of them.
3/5 ths
One whole and two fifths
To find out how many one-fifths are in 7 wholes, you can multiply 7 by 5, because each whole contains 5 one-fifths. Thus, 7 wholes contain ( 7 \times 5 = 35 ) one-fifths. Therefore, there are 35 one-fifths in 7 wholes.
thirty-five 35 / 5 = 7 5 fifths = 1 whole then that 5 x 7 = 35
3.9333333...
We can convert into seventy-fifths. 6 and nine seventy-fifths minus twenty-five seventy-fifths equals negative 6 and thirty-four seventy-fifths.
minus three fifths
35 of them.
Two fifths is six fifteenths. Eleven fifteenths minus six fifteenths is five fifteenths, which is also one third.
3/5 ths
10/3 + 17/5 = 50/15 + 51/15 = 101/15 = 6 and 11/15
2/3 = 10/15 and 1/5 = 3/15. 10/15 - 3/15 = 7/15 There's the answer
Oh, what a lovely question! If you have 3 wholes and you want to see how many one-fifths are in them, you simply divide 3 by 1/5. That means you would have 15 one-fifths in 3 wholes. Isn't that just a happy little math problem?