Answer:
Depending of the exact career but measurements are plentiful in the healthcare business.
First, you'll most likely deal with weight and height... since that's part of most health care consultations.
Then, if you deal with medication, you'll use grams, milligrams, milliliters, liters all the time. depending if the medication is in solid or liquid form.
Even as a nutritionist, you'll deal with grams and such for portion sizes.
There are countless of ways you'll use maths and measurements in the healthcare sector.
Answer:
<u>Michelle has 17 pencils</u>
Step-by-step explanation:
Number of pencils Leslie has = 8 (She has 9 fewer pencils than Michelle)
Number of pencils Michelle has = 9 more than Leslie
How many pencils does Michelle have?
If Leslie has 8 and she has 9 fewer than Michelle, then:
Michelle has 9 more than Leslie
<u>Michelle has 9 + 8 = 17 pencils</u>
Answer:
Step-by-step explanation: The student divided the number of wins by the number of losses.
The student should have divided the number of wins by the total number of games.
The student should have first added 20 and 10 to find that there were a total of 30 games.
It is 4,000. :P
The 6 in the hundreds tells you to round up. 4 and under, keep it. 5 and up, raise it by one. :)