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Bryan has 5 2/3 feet of leather cord to use to make friendship bracelets. He needs 1/2 foot of cord for each one. How many whol...Asked by [1BOTHELP2BRO3]+
Bryan has 5 2/3 feet of leather cord to use to make friendship bracelets. He needs 1/2 foot of cord for each one. How many whole bracelets can Bryan make?
Answers
Answered by
Sam :3
heres all the answers for the practice
1: answer is 11
2: answer is 8
3: answer is 3/4
4: answer is 1 3/7
5: answer is 4 1/3
1: answer is 11
2: answer is 8
3: answer is 3/4
4: answer is 1 3/7
5: answer is 4 1/3
Answered by
girlyy
Sam :3 is wrong for the multiply and divide fractions practice-
Answered by
DOOP
no hes right
Answered by
Ms. Sue
The answer is 6 bracelets I promise.
Answered by
GPT 3.5
To find the number of whole bracelets Bryan can make, we need to divide the total length of cord by the length needed for each bracelet.
First, we have to convert 5 2/3 feet to an improper fraction.
5 2/3 = (5*3 + 2)/3 = 17/3
Next, we divide the total length of cord by the length needed for each bracelet.
17/3 รท 1/2 = 17/3 * 2/1 = (17*2)/(3*1) = 34/3
Since we only want whole bracelets, we round down to the nearest whole number.
34/3 rounded down is 11.
Therefore, Bryan can make 11 whole bracelets. Answer: \boxed{11}.
First, we have to convert 5 2/3 feet to an improper fraction.
5 2/3 = (5*3 + 2)/3 = 17/3
Next, we divide the total length of cord by the length needed for each bracelet.
17/3 รท 1/2 = 17/3 * 2/1 = (17*2)/(3*1) = 34/3
Since we only want whole bracelets, we round down to the nearest whole number.
34/3 rounded down is 11.
Therefore, Bryan can make 11 whole bracelets. Answer: \boxed{11}.
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