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  1. A recipe 1/2 of milk for each 1/5 of water.How many cups of

    A recipe 1/2 of milk for each 1/5 of water.How many cups of water are needed for each cup of milk? How many cups of water as are needed for 3 cups of milk Algebra

  2. A box of has 3/8 cup remaining. Another box has 1/3 cup left.

    Nov 23, 2016 · A box of has 3/8 cup remaining. Another box has 1/3 cup left. How many cups of granola are there overall? AlgebraProperties of Real NumbersSubtraction of Rational Numbers

  3. Answers created by Lydia - Socratic

    Beryl made 5 gallons of lemonade for a family gathering. About how many cups of lemonade did Beryl make? What is the greatest common factor of 4 and 10? Are there any possessive …

  4. Answers created by PJ - Socratic

    In a certain recipe, the ratio of the number of cups of water to the number of cups of flour must be 3:2. How many cups of flour are needed to make three mixtures of such recipe? A 5m long …

  5. Question #9a203 - Socratic

    Here's what I got. You know that 2overbrace("NaCl"_ ((l)))^(color(blue)("Na"_ ((l))^(+) + "Cl"_ ((l))^(-))) -> 2"Na"_ ((s)) + "Cl"_ (2(g)) uarr In this redox reaction ...

  6. Question #2d1b5 + Example - Socratic

    Here's how I would do it. > The problem is in getting the numbers to line up. I use "color (white) (X)" with as many Xs and other characters as needed to get the correct alignment. For the …

  7. Question #0e30e - Socratic

    One purpose outlined in the Preamble is to "provide for the common defense." In essence, this means that the government should protect its people through a strong military. The Preamble …

  8. Question #71c28 - Socratic

    The question asks 'How many litres of acid must be added so that the result solution in a 50% solution. If we denote the quantity of added acid by x the new quantities will be: Acid: 2.5+x …

  9. Question #0984e - Socratic

    Use the molarities and volumes of the two solutions to determine how many moles of each you have C = n V ⇒ n = C ⋅ V nCH3COOH = 0.5000 moles L ⋅ 200 ⋅ 10−3L = 0.1000 moles and nN …

  10. Question #45686 - Socratic

    Here's my take on this. I'm not really sure I understand what you're asking here, but I'll try to make an educated guess. A solution's molarity tells you many moles of solute you get per liter of …