There are 7/8

cups of sugar in a canister in the kitchen. Ms. Johnson used 1/2
of the sugar when she was preparing dessert for her daughter's birthday cake. How much sugar did she use?

To find the amount of sugar Ms. Johnson used, we need to multiply the amount of sugar in the canister by 1/2.

1/2 * 7/8 = (1*7)/(2*8) = 7/16

Ms. Johnson used 7/16 cups of sugar when preparing the dessert.

How much did Mr. Romanov pay for 9.3 gallons of gas at $3.30 a gallon?(1 point)

To find the total cost of the gas, we need to multiply the number of gallons by the price per gallon.

9.3 * 3.30 = $30.69

Mr. Romanov paid $30.69 for 9.3 gallons of gas.

One-third of the campers at Rosewood Performing Arts Camp play an instrument. Two-fifths of those campers play the guitar. What fraction of the campers at Rosewood Performing Arts Camp play the guitar?(1 point)

To find the fraction of campers who play the guitar, we need to multiply the fractions representing the proportion of campers who play an instrument and the proportion of campers who play the guitar within that group.

Fraction of campers who play an instrument: 1/3
Fraction of those campers who play the guitar: 2/5

Fraction of campers who play the guitar = (1/3) * (2/5) = 2/15

Therefore, 2/15 of the campers at Rosewood Performing Arts Camp play the guitar.

To find out how much sugar Ms. Johnson used, we need to multiply the total amount of sugar in the canister by the fraction representing the portion she used.

Step 1: Determine the total amount of sugar in the canister.
There are 7/8 cups of sugar in the canister.

Step 2: Determine the fraction representing the portion Ms. Johnson used.
She used 1/2 of the sugar.

Step 3: Multiply the total amount of sugar by the fraction representing the portion used.
(7/8) * (1/2) = (7 * 1) / (8 * 2) = 7/16

Therefore, Ms. Johnson used 7/16 cups of sugar.

To find out how much sugar Ms. Johnson used, you can multiply the amount of sugar in the canister by the fraction representing the fraction she used.

In this case, there are 7/8 cups of sugar in the canister, and she used 1/2 of that amount. To calculate it:

1. Multiply the two fractions: (7/8) * (1/2).
2. Multiply the numerators (top numbers) together: 7 * 1 = 7.
3. Multiply the denominators (bottom numbers) together: 8 * 2 = 16.
4. Write down the product: 7/16.

Therefore, Ms. Johnson used 7/16 cups of sugar when preparing the dessert for her daughter's birthday cake.