Respuesta :
Well, for his you would have to find the unit rate.
The easiest way to do this would first be converting 3/5 into a fraction (0.6)
next, divide that by 4 to get the weight of 1.
0.6/4 (the same as 0.6 x 0.25 or 6/10 x 1/4 if you are doing it without a calculator)
each bread weighs 3/20 (or 0.15) pounds.
The easiest way to do this would first be converting 3/5 into a fraction (0.6)
next, divide that by 4 to get the weight of 1.
0.6/4 (the same as 0.6 x 0.25 or 6/10 x 1/4 if you are doing it without a calculator)
each bread weighs 3/20 (or 0.15) pounds.
Greetings!
We can create an equation to solve:
Let W represent the weight of an individual bread roll.
[tex]W= \frac{ \frac{3}{5} }{4}[/tex]
Multiply both sides by [tex]\frac{1}{4}[/tex].
[tex]W=\frac{ \frac{3}{5} }{\frac{4}{1}}[/tex]
[tex]W=\frac{3}{5}*\frac{1}{4}[/tex]
[tex]W=\frac{3}{20}[/tex]
The Answer Is:
[tex] \left[\begin{array}{ccc}W= \frac{3}{20}\end{array}\right] [/tex]
The weight of one bread roll is [tex]\frac{3}{20}[/tex] pounds.
Hope this helps.
-Benjamin
We can create an equation to solve:
Let W represent the weight of an individual bread roll.
[tex]W= \frac{ \frac{3}{5} }{4}[/tex]
Multiply both sides by [tex]\frac{1}{4}[/tex].
[tex]W=\frac{ \frac{3}{5} }{\frac{4}{1}}[/tex]
[tex]W=\frac{3}{5}*\frac{1}{4}[/tex]
[tex]W=\frac{3}{20}[/tex]
The Answer Is:
[tex] \left[\begin{array}{ccc}W= \frac{3}{20}\end{array}\right] [/tex]
The weight of one bread roll is [tex]\frac{3}{20}[/tex] pounds.
Hope this helps.
-Benjamin