Difference between revisions of "Euc20191/Sub-Problem 1"

(Created page with "==Problem== <math>(a)</math> Joyce has two identical jars. The first jar is <math>\frac{3}{4}</math> full of water and contains <math>300</math> mL of water. The second jar i...")
 
(Undo revision 262962 by Yuhao2012 (talk))
(Tag: Undo)
 
(2 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 2: Line 2:
  
 
<math>(a)</math> Joyce has two identical jars. The first jar is <math>\frac{3}{4}</math> full of water and contains <math>300</math> mL of water. The second jar is <math>\frac{1}{4}</math> full of water. How much water, in mL, does the second jar contain?
 
<math>(a)</math> Joyce has two identical jars. The first jar is <math>\frac{3}{4}</math> full of water and contains <math>300</math> mL of water. The second jar is <math>\frac{1}{4}</math> full of water. How much water, in mL, does the second jar contain?
 +
 +
==Solution==
 +
 +
Since <math>\frac{3}{4}</math> of a jar is <math>300</math> mL, and because the first jar has 3 times as much water as the second jar (<math>\frac{\frac{3}{4}}{\frac{1}{4}}=3</math>), then the second jar has <math>\frac{300}{3}=\boxed{100}</math> mL of water.
 +
 +
~Baihly2024

Latest revision as of 11:31, 13 October 2025

Problem

$(a)$ Joyce has two identical jars. The first jar is $\frac{3}{4}$ full of water and contains $300$ mL of water. The second jar is $\frac{1}{4}$ full of water. How much water, in mL, does the second jar contain?

Solution

Since $\frac{3}{4}$ of a jar is $300$ mL, and because the first jar has 3 times as much water as the second jar ($\frac{\frac{3}{4}}{\frac{1}{4}}=3$), then the second jar has $\frac{300}{3}=\boxed{100}$ mL of water.

~Baihly2024