Multiplication practice problems - page 19 of 103
Number of problems found: 2046
- Brother 82111
When I was two years old, my brother was twice as old as me; how old was the brother? - Rectangle 82087
A 9cm × 15cm rectangle is divided into unit squares. How many paths are there from one rectangle vertex to the opposite vertex if one can only go to the right and up the sides of the squares? - Cupcakes 82074
Mom was baking dinner. A maximum of 20 cakes can fit on one tray. She baked more than 1 sheet but less than 7 sheets. How many cupcakes could Mom bake? - Difference 82005
Multiply the difference between the numbers 13202 and 23 by the quotient of these two numbers.
- Product 82004
The product of the three numbers is 63,650. Find the third number if two of them are 25 and 67. - Repetition: 82003
Calculate how many different monograms (short name and surname) I can make from the letters A, E, M, Z, and K. a) with repetition: b) without repetition: - Notebooks 82002
The teacher bought for her class (for each student), in which there are 15 students, notebooks for €0.30, books for €4.50 and special pens for €2.80. How much did they have left in the class fund when they had €200 there? - We randomly
We randomly select a three-digit number. What is the probability that the number 8 occurs at most once in its notation? - Fractions 81761
Mom baked cakes. She set aside a third of them for her father. She left the rest on the table. Rišo came and ate a third of the cakes that were on the table. What fraction of all the pies was left on the table? Write the result in fractions.
- Children 81752
How many nuts would we need at least to divide the nuts equally among 10 or 18 children? - Participated 81728
The school volleyball tournament was played on a one-on-one basis. One match lasted 15 minutes, and 3 hours and 45 minutes were played. Calculate how many teams participated. - Celebrated 81690
Katka celebrated her birthday with four friends. Each girl drank two two-cup glasses of juice. How many liters of fluid did they drink? - Secondary 81688
Hello, this year I am doing the entrance exams for secondary school. I wanted to ask if I have an example: HOW MANY TIMES is a quarter of the number 1.5 smaller than the number 4 1/2, and I don't know what to do with that? HOW MANY TIMES will I add, subtr - Questions 81676
You will learn 50% of the 30 questions. If I get 4 questions, I'll know 3.
- Probability 81637
We randomly select three different points from the vertices of a regular heptagon and connect them with line segments. The probability that the resulting triangle will be isosceles is equal to: (A) 1/3 (B) 2/5 (C) 3/5 (D) 4/7 - Consecutively numbers
How many ways are there to arrange the numbers 3, 2, 15, 8, and 6 so that the even numbers are arranged in ascending order (not necessarily consecutively)? - Pampalini 81604
Pampalini, an animal hunter, told a stranger how he caught a huge crocodile. He claimed that his head was as long as half his tail, and his body was as long as three and a half heads. How long was the crocodile if you know its tail was 4 meters? - Probability 81591
We roll the dice three times. Calculate the probability of getting an even number on the first, second, or third toss. - Indistinguishable 81481
How many ways can a tower of five yellow and four blue cubes be built so that each yellow cube is adjacent to at least one other yellow cube? Yellow dice are indistinguishable, and so are blue dice.
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