Sara discarded 110 of the apples she picked as defective. Of the apples remaining, 300 were made into cider. The rest were sold as fresh fruit. What fraction of the total apples picked were sold as fresh fruit?(1 point)

Responses

not enough information
not enough information

35
Start Fraction 3 over 5 End Fraction

310
Start Fraction 3 over 10 End Fraction

45

not enough information

The town of Oak Manor measures 3.8 miles by 4.2 miles. Solve for the total area.(1 point)

Responses

15.96 mi
15.96 mi

8 mi2
8 mi squared

15.96 mi2
15.96 mi squared

16 mi2

15.96 mi2

A diver searches for a sunken treasure that is 97.2

feet below the surface. What is the diver's elevation when he is 23 of the way down? (1 point)
Responses

−64.8
ft.
negative 64 point 8 ft.

−48.5
ft.
negative 48 point 5 ft.

−145.8 ft.
negative 145 point 8 ft.

−32.4
ft.

-64.8 ft.

A basketball player is 623 feet tall. His infant son is 14 as tall. How tall is his son?(1 point)

Responses

123 ft.
1 Start Fraction 2 over 3 End Fraction ft.

2212 ft.
2 Start Fraction 2 over 12 End Fraction ft.

223 ft.
2 Start Fraction 2 over 3 End Fraction ft.

112 ft.

112 ft.

Sara discarded 110 of the apples she picked as defective. Of the apples remaining, 300 were made into cider. The rest were sold as fresh fruit. What fraction of the total apples picked were sold as fresh fruit?(1 point)

Responses

A.not enough information

B.3/5
Start Fraction 3 over 5 End Fraction

C.3/10
Start Fraction 3 over 10 End Fraction

D.4/5

To find the fraction of the total apples picked that were sold as fresh fruit, we need to determine how many apples were left after Sara discarded the defective ones and made cider.

Let's start with the information given:

Total apples picked = 110 (discarded) + remaining apples

We are not given the specific number of remaining apples, but we do know that out of the remaining apples, 300 were made into cider. Therefore:

Remaining apples = 300 (cider) + fresh fruit

To find the fraction of apples sold as fresh fruit, we need to divide the number of fresh fruit apples by the total number of apples picked:

Fraction of fresh fruit apples = fresh fruit / total apples picked

Since we don't have the specific numbers, we cannot calculate the fraction accurately. The correct answer would be "not enough information."