1.If john served fruit punch in 8 ounce cups to a class on Monday. Mr. Roberts found tat there were 12 cups in the trash. Explain what is unknown.

2.John served fruit punch in 8 ounce cups to a class on Monday. Mr. Roberts saw that their are 12 cups in the trash. Write an expression using distributive property representing the fruit punch LEFT OVER in ounces.
3.simplify your expression.
[4.On Friday John served fruit punch in 10 ounce cups. Mr. Roberts found 8 cups in the trash. He also drank 7 ounces of fruit punch that day.Write an expression using distributive property representing the number of ounces of fruit punch LEFT OVER on Tuesday.
5.simplify your expression.
6.Write a simplified expression representing how many ounces of fruit punch john HAD LEFT OVER in his two day visit.
7.If there are 33 students in the class, what was the total number of ounces Left over that week?
8.About how many gallons f fruit punch were LEFT OVER? Round to the nearest

1. The unknown in this scenario is the total number of cups of fruit punch served to the class on Monday by John.

2. The expression using the distributive property representing the fruit punch left over in ounces is:

Total fruit punch served - (Number of cups in the trash * Size of each cup)

In this case, the expression will be: (Total fruit punch served) - (12 cups * 8 ounces)

3. To simplify the expression, you need to know the total fruit punch served on Monday. For instance, if John served 30 cups of fruit punch, the expression would be: (30 cups * 8 ounces) - (12 cups * 8 ounces) = (240 ounces) - (96 ounces) = 144 ounces.

4. The expression using the distributive property representing the number of ounces of fruit punch left over on Tuesday is:

Total fruit punch served on Friday - (Number of cups in the trash * Size of each cup) - Fruit punch drank that day

In this case, the expression will be: (Total fruit punch served on Friday) - (8 cups * 10 ounces) - (7 ounces)

5. To simplify the expression, you need to know the total fruit punch served on Friday. For example, if John served 40 cups of fruit punch, the expression would be: (40 cups * 10 ounces) - (8 cups * 10 ounces) - (7 ounces) = (400 ounces) - (80 ounces) - (7 ounces) = 313 ounces.

6. A simplified expression representing how many ounces of fruit punch John had left over in his two-day visit would be to add the ounces left over on Monday (from step 3) to the ounces left over on Tuesday (from step 5). For example, if he had 144 ounces left over on Monday and 313 ounces left over on Tuesday, the expression would be: 144 ounces + 313 ounces = 457 ounces.

7. To calculate the total number of ounces left over that week, you would need to know how much fruit punch was served each day and how much was left over each day. For example, if there were 457 ounces left over in total (from step 6) and John served 30 cups (or 240 ounces) on Monday and 40 cups (or 400 ounces) on Friday, the total would be: 457 ounces + 240 ounces + 400 ounces = 1097 ounces.

8. To estimate how many gallons of fruit punch were left over, you need to divide the total number of ounces left over by the number of ounces in a gallon. Since there are 128 ounces in a gallon, you can divide the total number of ounces left over by 128. For example, if there were 1097 ounces left over (from step 7), the estimated number of gallons left over would be: 1097 ounces / 128 ounces/gallon ≈ 8.57 gallons (rounded to the nearest hundredth).