Rimshot bought two equal sized pizzas. He cut the first one into 8 equal pieces and ate three of them. Then he cut the other pizza into 6 equal pieces and ate one of them. What fraction of a whole pizza did he eat altogether?

Answers

Answer 1
Answer:

i think its 4/8 because a whole pizza is 8 slices so he ate 3 in the first one and 1 in the second one


Related Questions

The circus ringleader, Ms. Evelyn, wants all the employees to have miniature cakes in the shape of either a circus ball or a clown hat. She wants the clown hat dessert and the circus ball dessert to be the same volume. The radius of both cake pieces will be 3 in. What must the height of the clown hat cake be in order for the two cakes to be equal in volume? Round to the nearest hundredth if necessary. Explain or show your work.
What is the meaning of zero in "3 miles below sea level" (we are doing integers)
How do you do this problem 3 2/5 + 3/8 + 1 1/2
What is the number 2,305,012 written in expanded notation?
it is 42 1/2 miles from eaton to baxter, and 37 4/5 miles from baxter to Wellington. how far is it from eaton to Wellington, if you go by way of Baxter??

Each side of a cube is 3.1 cm long. Find the volume of the cube.a. 9.61 cm^3
b. 9.3 cm^3
c. 6.2 cm^3
d. 29.791cm^3

Answers

d. 29.791cm^3Volume= l×h×w3.1×3.1= 9.619.61×3.1= 29.791

A rectangular garden is 6 feet long and 4 feet wide. A second rectangular garden has dimensions that are double the dimensions of the first garden. What is the percent of change in perimeter from the first garden to the second garden?

Answers

First rectangular garden:

length = 6 feet and width =4 feet

Perimeter of first garden =2(l+w) =2(6+4) =20 feet...........(1)

Second rectangular garden:

second rectangular garden has dimensions that are double the dimensions of the first garden

length =2* 6 =12 feet and width =2* 4 =8 feet

Perimeter of second garden =2(12+8) =2*20=40 feet

percentage change in perimeter = (perimeter of second garden-perimeter of first garden)/(perimeter of first garden ) *100

% change = (40-20)/20 *100 =100

% change =100%

Help me! I don't remember any of this.

Answers

The meal costs $7.50. She wants to leave a 20% tip.

A 10% tip would be 75 cents ($0.75), because 7.5 / 10 = 0.75.

A 20% tip would be $1.50 because 7.5 / 5 = 1.50

You can also multiply the 10% answer by 2 to get the same number.

A factory packages 4250 boxes of cereal. The number of oat cereal boxes is 715 more than the number of wheat cereal boxes. The number of fruit cereal boxes is 5 times the number of wheat cereal boxes. How many fruit cereal boxes does the factory package.

Answers

o = number of oat cereal, w = number of wheat cereal, f = number of fruit cereal:

o + w + f = 4250
o = w + 715
f = 5w

The second equation tells us the value of o in terms of w, and the third equation tells us the value of f in terms of w, so we can plug in "w + 715" for o and "5w" for f in the first equation:

o + w + f = 4250
(w + 715) + w + (5w) = 4250

Then, add like terms and subtract and divide to isolate the w:

w + 715 + w + 5w = 4250
7w + 715 = 4250                           Subtract 715 on both sides:
7w = 3535                                    Divide by 7 on each side:
w = 505

Now that we have w, we can plug it into the last equation to find f, the number of fruit cereal boxes:

f = 5w
f = 5(505)
f = 2525

Therefore, the factory packages 2525 fruit cereal boxes.

Is 100 MG less than 10g

Answers

no becuase 100 mg is greater than 10gs 100>10

there are 1000 grams in a gram  and 1000 times 10 is 10000 so yes 100 mg is less than a 10g

How do I find the the perimeter of a rectangle
in a coordinate plane

Answers


From the way you worded the question, it sounds like you have
the (x, y) coordinates of each corner of the rectangle.

The perimeter of any shape is the distance all the way around it,
or the sum of the lengths of all the sides.

So you have to take the coordinates of the four corners of the
rectangle, and find the length of each side ... that's the distance
between each pair of corner-points.  Then addum up to get the
perimeter.

I know finding the distance between two points is a pain, so I'll
tell you a way to make it a bit simpler:  You don't actually need to
do it 4 times.  You can get away with doing it only 2 times, and
you'll have enough information to find the perimeter.

Take the coordinates at the ends of any side of the rectangle.
Find the distance between them.  The side opposite that one
has the same length.

Then take the coordinates of either side that hooks onto the
side you just did.  One end of it will have the same coordinates
that you just worked with.  Find the distance between the two ends.
You know that this distance is the other dimension of the rectangle,
and you also know that the side opposite it has the same length.

So now, you found the distance between two pairs of points,
and you know both dimensions of the rectangle, and you know
the length of all four sides.

Now you can wrap it up !