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tomas bought a bottle of shampoo that held 10.5 fluid ounces. he uses 1/16 of the shampoo every time he washes his hair. how many ounces of the shampoo are left after he washes his hair 6 times please help because I'm confused with this question and explain clearly too please

User Averasko
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2 Answers

3 votes


1) 10.5 = 10 1/2 = 21/2 ounces in bottle

2) 21/2 * 1/16 = 21/32 ounces one use

3) 21/32 * 6 = 63/16 ounces six use

4) 21/2 - 63/16 = 168/16 - 63/16 = 105/16 = 6 9/16 ounces left

User Nathalia Soragge
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7.9k points
5 votes

Answer


6(9)/(16) fluid ounces

Step-by-step explanation

First, we are going to find the total amount of shampoo he used. We know from a our problem that he uses
(1)/(16) of the shampoo every time he washes his hair and he washed his hair 6 times, so we just need to multiply the number of times (6) by the amount used every time (
(1)/(16)) to find how much shampoo he used:


6*(1)/(16) =(6)/(16) =(3)/(8)

We know that he used
(3)/(8) of the bottle of shampoo. Since the bottle of shampoo held 10.5 fluid ounces, we are going to multiply 10.5 fluid ounces by
(3)/(8) to find how much fluid ounces he used:


10.5f.oz*(3)/(8) =3.9375f.oz

Now, to find the ounces of shampoo left, we just need to subtract the ounces used (3.9375 fluid ounces) by the initial fluid ounces in the bottle of shampoo (10.5 fluid ounces):


10.5f.oz-3.9375f.oz=6.5625f.oz or expressed as a mixed fraction:
6(9)/(16) f.oz

We can conclude that there are
6(9)/(16) fluid ounces of shampoo left after Tomas washed his hair 6 times.

User Havanagrawal
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