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Of 157 students how many could be put equaly in 5 classes? - Answers

If a number is divisible by 5, it either ends in a 0 or a 5. Since this doesn't end in either, we know it isn't divisible by 5. We should find the next lowest number that is divisible by 5. Since 155 ends in a five, we know it is divisible by 5, and because this is the closest number below 157 that is divisible by 155, we know this is the greatest number of students that could be put equally into 5 classes. Alternatively, we can divide 157 by 5, and we get 31.4. Since we only want something that divides evenly by 5, we round this down to 31, then multiply by 5 to get 155.



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Of 157 students how many could be put equaly in 5 classes? - Answers

https://math.answers.com/algebra/Of_157_students_how_many_could_be_put_equaly_in_5_classes

If a number is divisible by 5, it either ends in a 0 or a 5. Since this doesn't end in either, we know it isn't divisible by 5. We should find the next lowest number that is divisible by 5. Since 155 ends in a five, we know it is divisible by 5, and because this is the closest number below 157 that is divisible by 155, we know this is the greatest number of students that could be put equally into 5 classes. Alternatively, we can divide 157 by 5, and we get 31.4. Since we only want something that divides evenly by 5, we round this down to 31, then multiply by 5 to get 155.



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https://math.answers.com/algebra/Of_157_students_how_many_could_be_put_equaly_in_5_classes

Of 157 students how many could be put equaly in 5 classes? - Answers

If a number is divisible by 5, it either ends in a 0 or a 5. Since this doesn't end in either, we know it isn't divisible by 5. We should find the next lowest number that is divisible by 5. Since 155 ends in a five, we know it is divisible by 5, and because this is the closest number below 157 that is divisible by 155, we know this is the greatest number of students that could be put equally into 5 classes. Alternatively, we can divide 157 by 5, and we get 31.4. Since we only want something that divides evenly by 5, we round this down to 31, then multiply by 5 to get 155.

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      If a number is divisible by 5, it either ends in a 0 or a 5. Since this doesn't end in either, we know it isn't divisible by 5. We should find the next lowest number that is divisible by 5. Since 155 ends in a five, we know it is divisible by 5, and because this is the closest number below 157 that is divisible by 155, we know this is the greatest number of students that could be put equally into 5 classes. Alternatively, we can divide 157 by 5, and we get 31.4. Since we only want something that divides evenly by 5, we round this down to 31, then multiply by 5 to get 155.
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