Jeffrey is making four batches of chocolate chip cookies each batch of cookies needs two and 3/4 cup of chocolate chips if he has 96 oz of chocolate chips how many ounces will be left over use my two math and distributes of property

To find out how many ounces of chocolate chips Jeffrey will have left over after making the four batches of cookies, we need to multiply the amount of chocolate chips needed per batch by the number of batches.

The amount of chocolate chips needed per batch is 2 and 3/4 cups.
Since 1 cup is equal to 8 ounces, 2 and 3/4 cups is equal to (2 * 8) + (3/4 * 8) = 16 + 6 = 22 ounces.

Jeffrey is making four batches of cookies, so the total amount of chocolate chips needed is 4 * 22 = 88 ounces.

If Jeffrey has 96 ounces of chocolate chips, the amount left over is 96 - 88 = 8 ounces.

Therefore, Jeffrey will have 8 ounces of chocolate chips left over after making the four batches of cookies.

To find out how many ounces of chocolate chips will be left over, we'll follow these steps:

Step 1: Calculate the total number of cups needed for the four batches.
Each batch requires 2 and 3/4 cups of chocolate chips.
4 batches will require: 4 * (2 and 3/4) cups = 11 cups of chocolate chips.

Step 2: Convert the number of cups to ounces.
1 cup is equivalent to 8 ounces.
So, 11 cups of chocolate chips will be: 11 * 8 = 88 ounces.

Step 3: Calculate the number of ounces left over.
Given that Jeffrey has 96 ounces of chocolate chips, we'll subtract the amount used from the total amount.
96 ounces - 88 ounces = 8 ounces.

Therefore, Jeffrey will have 8 ounces of chocolate chips left over.

To find out how many ounces of chocolate chips will be left over, we first need to determine the total number of cups of chocolate chips Jeffrey needs for all four batches of cookies.

Each batch of cookies requires 2 and 3/4 cups of chocolate chips. To find the total number of cups needed for four batches, we can multiply 2 and 3/4 by 4:

2 and 3/4 cups * 4 = 11 cups

Since Jeffrey has 96 oz of chocolate chips, we need to convert the cups to ounces to see if it is enough.

There are 8 ounces in 1 cup, so we can multiply the total number of cups by 8 to convert it to ounces:

11 cups * 8 ounces = 88 ounces

Therefore, if Jeffrey needs 88 ounces of chocolate chips for all four batches of cookies, and he has 96 ounces, there will be 96 - 88 = 8 ounces left over.

In this solution, I used the multiplication property of equality (2 and 3/4 cups * 4) and the distributive property (11 cups * 8 ounces) to calculate the values step by step.