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Re: A certain recipe calls for 2 cups of sugar and cups of flour [#permalink]
I am not sure this is the right place to ask, but, when it is written \(3\frac{1}{2}\) does it mean \(3.5\) or \(3*\frac{1}{2}=\frac{3}{2}\)?
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Re: A certain recipe calls for 2 cups of sugar and cups of flour [#permalink]
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IlCreatore wrote:
I am not sure this is the right place to ask, but, when it is written \(3\frac{1}{2}\) does it mean \(3.5\) or \(3*\frac{1}{2}=\frac{3}{2}\)?



The second one you said or 1.5.

Hope now is clear.

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Re: A certain recipe calls for 2 cups of sugar and cups of flour [#permalink]
Carcass wrote:
IlCreatore wrote:
I am not sure this is the right place to ask, but, when it is written \(3\frac{1}{2}\) does it mean \(3.5\) or \(3*\frac{1}{2}=\frac{3}{2}\)?



The second one you said or 1.5.

Hope now is clear.

regards


Yes but in that case how can the answer be \(\frac{4}{7}\)? If \(3\frac{1}{2}\) means 1.5 then the ratio is \(\frac{3}{4}\) which is not even among the answers
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Re: A certain recipe calls for 2 cups of sugar and cups of flour [#permalink]
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Sincerely speaking your question is worth.

2 cups of sugar and 31/2 of flour. Which means 3 1/2 = 3/2 or 1.5

So, the ratio sugar to flour is \(\frac{2}{\frac{3}{2}}\) = \(\frac{4}{3}\) at the best......

I am the verbal expert. I would wait for the quant ones.

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Re: A certain recipe calls for 2 cups of sugar and cups of flour [#permalink]
Question can be made clearer, how one can know whether it's a mixed fraction or just 3/2. I suggest administrators to change it.
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Re: A certain recipe calls for 2 cups of sugar and cups of flour [#permalink]
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See more on fraction https://gre.myprepclub.com/forum/gre-ma ... tml#p97122

In this case your question is trivial

\(3 \frac{1}{2}\) is a mixed number

On the other hand \(\frac{3}{2}\) is \(\frac{3}{2}\) written in this manner
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Re: A certain recipe calls for 2 cups of sugar and cups of flour [#permalink]
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Thank you. But siting your explanation I made that statement. you have explained it as 3/2.
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A certain recipe calls for 2 cups of sugar and cups of flour [#permalink]
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Yes sir . you are correct. often my mind think in a shortest way because it is something that happens when you repeat the same thing over and over again and instead the students need a more clear and slowest approach

The ratio of cups sugar to cups of flour is \(\dfrac{2}{3 \frac{1}{2}}=\dfrac{2}{\frac{7}{2}}=2*\frac{2}{7}=\frac{4}{7}\)

C is the answer

I hope you appreciate the efforts
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Re: A certain recipe calls for 2 cups of sugar and cups of flour [#permalink]
Thank you, sir. For your explanation.
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Re: A certain recipe calls for 2 cups of sugar and cups of flour [#permalink]
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