lol new question below
oops wrong one
64 for the first one
are you sure
they're right :)
yup I am
@ugh.math Don't give out answers.
sorry :(
for the second one, you need to isolate c
For the first one, you multiply 4 to both sides. What's 16 * 4? @haleigh101101
you want me to tell her the steps?
@ugh.math You have to guide them to it so they get the answer by themselves. Don't give them the answer.
16*4 is 64 so i get it but i need help with the second one
@haleigh101101 tag @iGreen in every question, hes the best
I apologize haleigh.
ok
For the 2nd one, you multiply: \(\dfrac{3}{1} \times 6 \dfrac{1}{7}\).
what can you divide c by so that you can isolate c
Actually first we should convert it into an improper fraction. Multiply the denominator with the whole numer and add it with the numerator: 7 * 6 = 42 + 1 = 43 \(\dfrac{3}{1} \times\dfrac{43}{7} =~?\)
@iGreen it helps to explain why she has to multiply it by 3/1 so that she can do it again in the future on her own.
Yes, good point. 3 is being divided by \(n\), therefore we must do the opposite and multiply it.
No, how did you get that?
3 * 43 = ? 1 * 7 = ? @haleigh101101
You multiply the numerators with each other and multiply the denominators with each other.
yeah that's right.
i think im right so im going with 18 3/7 lol
Yep, you got it!
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