Still plug it the same way. If it were odd, it wouldn't cancel so you would have a fraction. If it were a negative less than 32, the overall number would stay positive
They usually set the problems up so that you can cancel easily using fractions. Lots of ways to do the problem, what comes to you first is usually the best
@@ColfaxMath I suppose it is for an aptitude test so throwing in the fraction curveball is definitely right at home. I was referring to regular day to day conversions.
Always loved Mathematics in school and still like them today! Love the explanation! :)
Thank you
1661
16 degC = 61 deg F
So, from the list, it's going to be a few degrees above 61 deg F.
Good way to go
@@ColfaxMath
Always a useful sanity check, if nothing else.
Why are you making this seem so easy 😂😂😂
It's not that bad with practice
I usually approximate C to F as C x 2 + 30 when I'm trying to understand C as an American
Good way to go
You are the best. ❤
Thank you
Thank you so much
Thank you
What if you have a negative odd number?
Still plug it the same way. If it were odd, it wouldn't cancel so you would have a fraction. If it were a negative less than 32, the overall number would stay positive
@@ColfaxMath That was fast, lol. Thank you for your answer.
@@Durermac Just multiply the Celsius value by 1.8 and add 32.
@@gabbleratchet1890 Thank you for your answer.
Thank You
Thank you
On number 12 i would like to know how does .60 -1 equals .4 I’m a little confused there
.6 -1 Should equal -.4
Still doesn't explain why small rocks don't float.
Is that a density question
Which grade is this?
No grade just how to convert C to F
Centi-grade😂
68 degrees
Yes, good
i mean, the internet is faster :D
Yes it is
C
Good
Good to know the military takes dunces 😂
Ok
Honestly don't know why people don't use 1.8 instead of 9/5th. LCD is maths worst nightmare. Lowest Common Denominator that is 🤣
They usually set the problems up so that you can cancel easily using fractions. Lots of ways to do the problem, what comes to you first is usually the best
@@ColfaxMath I suppose it is for an aptitude test so throwing in the fraction curveball is definitely right at home. I was referring to regular day to day conversions.
this is nothing like the asvab
What are the problems like? How do they differ from these
@@ColfaxMath asvab easier
@@wockhardt69 good to hear