Number of guest 12, 21 __ 30
number of tables 1, 4 __ 9 __
Linda is having a party. She'll have 4 tables for every 12 guests.
Complete the table below showing the number of tables and the number of guests.
Number of guest __ 12, 21 __ 30
number of tables 1, 4 __ 9 __
5 answers
fill in the blank of this Number of guest __ 12, 21 __ 30
number of tables 1, 4 __ 9 __
("__" that means blank)
number of tables 1, 4 __ 9 __
("__" that means blank)
Number of guest 12, 21, 30
number of tables 1, 4, 9
number of tables 1, 4, 9
ur missing numbers
Apologies for the confusion. Here is the corrected table:
Number of guests: 12, 21, 30
Number of tables: 1, 4, __
To determine the missing number of tables, we can use the rule that Linda has 4 tables for every 12 guests.
So, for 12 guests, there would be 1 table.
For 21 guests, we can calculate the number of tables: 21 (guests) ÷ 12 (guests per table) = 1 and 9 (remainder). Therefore, there will be 1 table for the first 12 guests, and 2 tables for the remaining 9 guests.
For 30 guests, we need to calculate the number of tables: 30 ÷ 12 = 2 and 6. So, there will be 2 tables for the first 24 guests, and 3 tables for the remaining 6 guests.
The updated table is:
Number of guests: 12, 21, 30
Number of tables: 1, 4, 3
Number of guests: 12, 21, 30
Number of tables: 1, 4, __
To determine the missing number of tables, we can use the rule that Linda has 4 tables for every 12 guests.
So, for 12 guests, there would be 1 table.
For 21 guests, we can calculate the number of tables: 21 (guests) ÷ 12 (guests per table) = 1 and 9 (remainder). Therefore, there will be 1 table for the first 12 guests, and 2 tables for the remaining 9 guests.
For 30 guests, we need to calculate the number of tables: 30 ÷ 12 = 2 and 6. So, there will be 2 tables for the first 24 guests, and 3 tables for the remaining 6 guests.
The updated table is:
Number of guests: 12, 21, 30
Number of tables: 1, 4, 3