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    Q&A - P4 Math

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Primary 4
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    • T Offline
      ttyh
      last edited by

      2 boys can sell as many durains as 3 girls. If 6 boys and 7 girls sold 192 durians altogether, how many durians did each boy sell?

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      • T Offline
        tianzhu
        last edited by

        ttyh:
        2 boys can sell as many durains as 3 girls. If 6 boys and 7 girls sold 192 durians altogether, how many durians did each boy sell?

        Hi

        You may use “Number*Value”

        Use a common multiple of 6 (2 and 3)

        2 boys ----- 6 units
        1 boy ------ 3 units

        3 girls ------ 6 units
        1 girl ------- 2 units

        6 boys and 7 girls sold 192 durians altogether

        (6*3) + (7*2) ------ 192
        32 units ------ 192
        1 unit ------ 6

        1 boy ------ 3 units ------- 18

        Best wishes

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        • C Offline
          cmm
          last edited by

          Sue has more than 50 hairpins.

          If she puts them in packets of 7, she has 5 hairpins left.
          If she puts them in packets of 9, she has 6 hairpins left.
          How many hairpins does Sue have?

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          • A Offline
            alan000
            last edited by

            http://i42.tinypic.com/69p8jk.gif\">

            cmm:
            Sue has more than 50 hairpins.

            If she puts them in packets of 7, she has 5 hairpins left.
            If she puts them in packets of 9, she has 6 hairpins left.
            How many hairpins does Sue have?
            Dear cmm,

            Hope this helps.

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            • C Offline
              cmm
              last edited by

              Many thanks, alan000!!!

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              • B Offline
                BigDevil
                last edited by

                tianzhu:


                http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5092/5424577928_4b58b5019e_z.jpg\">
                Hi tianzhu,

                Like CNS, I'm quite confused.

                44 cars, 0 bicycle ----> 44 * 4 = 176 wheels
                43 cars, 1 bicycle ----> 43 * 4 + 1 * 2 = 174 wheels

                So why do you say that \"for every increase in 1 bicycle, the difference in the number of wheels drops by 6\"? Isn't it 176 - 174 = 2 wheels??

                :? :?

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                • T Offline
                  tianzhu
                  last edited by

                  BigDevil:

                  Like CNS, I'm quite confused.

                  44 cars, 0 bicycle ----> 44 * 4 = 176 wheels
                  43 cars, 1 bicycle ----> 43 * 4 + 1 * 2 = 174 wheels

                  So why do you say that \"for every increase in 1 bicycle, the difference in the number of wheels drops by 6\"? Isn't it 176 - 174 = 2 wheels??
                  Hi

                  There are 44 cars and bicycles. There are 128 more car wheels than bicycles. How many cars and bicycles are there?

                  43 cars ------ (43*4) ----- 172
                  1 bicycle ----- (1*2) ------ 2

                  Difference in number of wheels ------ (172-2) -------170

                  176 – 170 ------6

                  Please compare with this question.

                  There are 44 cars and bicycles. There are 128 wheels altogether. How many cars and bicycles are there?

                  In this case the difference is 2.

                  Best wishes

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                  • K Offline
                    KSP
                    last edited by

                    44 cars & bikes

                    128 more car wheels than bike

                    128 / 4 = 32cars
                    44 - 32 = 12 cars & bikes

                    Divide 12 into cars & bikes with both having same no. wheels

                    8 bikes x 2 = 16 wheels
                    4 cars x 4 = 16 wheels

                    Therefore there are 8 bikes.

                    Number of cars = 4 + (128/4) = 4 + 32 = 36

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                    • S Offline
                      sokk
                      last edited by

                      Hi,


                      I've a question that goes like this-

                      Each digit can be used only once.
                      Arrange the digits 2,4,7,8 and 9 in these boxes so as to get the largest and smallest possible products.

                      Largest product. : [ ][ ][ ] x [ ][ ] =
                      Smallest product : [ ][ ][ ] x [ ][ ] =

                      The answer is
                      872 x 94 = 81968 ( for the largest product)
                      489 x 27 = 13203. (for the smallest product)

                      The answer said that the method is by \"guess and check\". So wouldn't the students have a number of combinations to try out ?
                      Is there a more direct method in doing this kind of question rather than by guess and check ?


                      Thanks for helping me answer my question 🙂

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                      • C Offline
                        chloecube
                        last edited by

                        hi,


                        need help on this.thks

                        James has twice as much money as Alex. After Alex spent $50, James had thrice as much as Alex. how much money did James have than Alex at first.

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