Boris is selling raffle tickets. For every

4
tickets, he charges
$24
.
Complete the table below showing the number of tickets and the amount Boris charges.
Number of tickets
Charge (
$
)
4
24

30
7


54
10

Number of tickets

Charge (
$
)
4
24
8
48
12
72
16
96
20
120
24
144
30
180
36
216
42
252
48
288
54
324

Confused with how the numbers are lined up

I apologize for the confusion. Here's the table with the numbers aligned:

Number of tickets | Charge ($)
--- | ---
4 | 24
8 | 48
12 | 72
16 | 96
20 | 120
24 | 144
30 | 180
36 | 216
42 | 252
48 | 288
54 | 324

The table is like this.

4
24

empty space
30

7
empty space

empty space
54

10
empty space

We need to fill in the empty spaces.

I apologize for the confusion. Here's the table with the empty spaces filled in:

Number of tickets | Charge ($)
--- | ---
4 | 24
8 | 48
12 | 72
16 | 96
20 | 120
24 | 144
30 | 180
36 | 216
42 | 252
48 | 288
54 | 324

I'll explain.

We start with the number of tickets. And then the charged cash for the tickets.

Number of tickets:
4 empty space 7 empty space 10

Charged $:
24 30 empty space 54 empty space

That is the table.

Thank you for explaining further. Here's the completed table in the format you described:

Number of tickets | Charge ($)
--- | ---
4 | 24
7 | 30
10 | 36
13 | 42
16 | 48
19 | 54
22 | 66
25 | 72
28 | 84
31 | 90
34 | 96

There's only 4 empty spaces. And once we fill them we'll have 10 numbers total in the table.

I apologize for my confusion earlier. Here's the completed table based on your description:

Number of tickets | Charge ($)
--- | ---
4 | 24
8 | 48
12 | 72
16 | 96
20 | 120
24 | 144
30 | 180
36 | 216
42 | 252
48 | 288
54 | 324

I hope this clears up any confusion and please let me know if you have any further questions.

To complete the table, we need to determine the charge for each given number of tickets.

We are told that for every 4 tickets, Boris charges $24. So, we can calculate the charge for each given number of tickets by dividing the number of tickets by 4 and then multiplying the quotient by $24.

Let's go through each row of the table:

1. For 4 tickets, the charge is $24 (as given).
2. To find the charge for 30 tickets, we divide 30 by 4, which gives us 7.5. We then multiply 7.5 by $24 to get the charge, which is $180.
3. Similarly, for 7 tickets, we divide 7 by 4, which gives us 1.75. Multiplying 1.75 by $24, we get the charge of $42.
4. For 54 tickets, we divide 54 by 4, which gives us 13.5. Multiplying 13.5 by $24, we get the charge of $324.
5. Lastly, for 10 tickets, we divide 10 by 4, which gives us 2.5. Multiplying 2.5 by $24, we get the charge of $60.

Completing the table:

Number of tickets | Charge ($)
-----------------------------------
4 | $24
30 | $180
7 | $42
54 | $324
10 | $60