129k views
1 vote
melania walked her dogs 2 1/5 miles cathay walked her dog 1 3/4 times as far as Melania how many more miles did Cathay walk her dog

User Asur
by
7.2k points

2 Answers

4 votes
first off, let's keep in mind that a "whole" is a 1 unit, namely, same/same, in this case, we can say that four fourths is one whole, namely 4/4 is 1 whole.

so, we know Melania walked her dog 2 and 1/5 miles, that'd be a whole, or 4/4.

we also know that Cathay walks hers 1 and 3/4 of that, hmmmm let's convert both fractions to "improper" and take it from there.


\bf \begin{array}{lccll} &miles&\stackrel{whole}{fraction}\\ &\text{\textemdash\textemdash\textemdash}&\text{\textemdash\textemdash\textemdash}\\ Melania&2(1)/(5)&(4)/(4)\\\\ Cathay&x&1(3)/(4) \end{array}\implies \cfrac{2(1)/(5)}{x}=\cfrac{(4)/(4)}{1(3)/(4)}\implies \cfrac{(2\cdot 5+1)/(5)}{x}=\cfrac{(4)/(4)}{(1\cdot 4+3)/(4)}


\bf \cfrac{(11)/(5)}{(x)/(1)}=\cfrac{(4)/(4)}{(7)/(4)}\implies \cfrac{11}{5}\cdot \cfrac{1}{x}=\cfrac{4}{4}\cdot \cfrac{4}{7}\implies \cfrac{11}{5x}=\cfrac{4}{7}\implies 77=20x \\\\\\ \cfrac{77}{20}=x\impliedby \textit{Cathay does that many miles, what's their \underline{difference}?} \\\\\\ \stackrel{Cathay}{\cfrac{77}{20}}~~-~~\stackrel{Melania}{\cfrac{11}{5}}\impliedby \stackrel{LCD}{20}\implies \cfrac{77-44}{20}\implies \cfrac{33}{20}\implies 1(13)/(20)
User Victor Istomin
by
8.4k points
3 votes
Melanie walked her dog 3 17/20 more miles than Cathay
User Haldo
by
7.8k points
Welcome to QAmmunity.org, where you can ask questions and receive answers from other members of our community.

9.4m questions

12.2m answers

Categories