Ask Question
31 October, 07:01

There are 25 stationary bikes and treadmills altogether. If there are 7 more stationary bikes than treadmills, how many of each are there?

+2
Answers (2)
  1. 31 October, 08:12
    0
    25 - 7

    I would do this step because I know that there are 7 more stationary bikes than treadmills, later I would add seven to the stationary bikes.

    I would get the answer of 18 = 25 - 7

    Next I would divide 18 by 2 because there are only two objects in this word problem

    There are 9 treadmills and doing 9 plus 7 would get me 16 stationary bikes because they have 7 more than the treadmills

    16 Stationary Bikes

    9 Treadmills
  2. 31 October, 10:32
    0
    You'd solve this equation by writing two equations. I'd call treadmills x and stationary bikes as y. The two equation would be x+y=25 and y=x+7. You'd then plug the second equation into the first equation to get x + (x+7) = 25. You'd combine like terms, making it 2x+7=25. You'd then subtract 7 from both sides to get 18 and divide that by 2 to get 9. You have 9 treadmills. Finally, you'd plug 9 in for x in the equation y=x+7, to get 16 for stationary bikes.
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Find an answer to your question ✅ “There are 25 stationary bikes and treadmills altogether. If there are 7 more stationary bikes than treadmills, how many of each are there? ...” in 📘 Mathematics if you're in doubt about the correctness of the answers or there's no answer, then try to use the smart search and find answers to the similar questions.
Search for Other Answers