Answer:
6. Unit rate -
![(15 sit-ups)/(1 min)](https://img.qammunity.org/2019/formulas/mathematics/middle-school/xg3dbgzaim9f1q62hwfn8iskc6xnae52wy.png)
Explanation:
The unit rate is the number of items/actions/miles etc within 1 unit. Many examples are around us and can include miles per 1 hour or cost per one unit at the grocery store. We can find unit rate by dividing the quantity in the numerator by quantity in the denominator. Our result should give us a new denominator of 1 to be a unit rate.
For instance, sit-ups per minutes is sit-ups/minute. In the table, it says,
,
, and
. We pick one to divide.
![(45 sit-ups)/(3 mins)](https://img.qammunity.org/2019/formulas/mathematics/middle-school/62gzj0x85uic1r1737d1y1wcyye0ajegjb.png)
- this is the unit rate.
We can then multiply our unit rate to find the amount for any number of minutes. For 15 minutes, I multiply
by 15 which is
![(225 sit-ups)/(15 mins)](https://img.qammunity.org/2019/formulas/mathematics/middle-school/dquwz7sza50kqd1t9h85e1bc3eyq8icsox.png)