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13 June, 12:11

a store allows costumers to fill their own bags of candy, Terri decides she only wants jelly beans and chocolate drops, jelly beans sell for $0.98 per pound, and chocolate drops sell for $0.67 per pound, Terri's bag weighs 2.1 pounds and its costs $1.56. How many pounds of jelly beans and chocolate drops did Terri buy?

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  1. 13 June, 14:34
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    Use a system of equations!

    We know that:

    $1.56 = 0.98j + 0.67c

    (j represents how many pounds of jelly beans, and c represents how many pounds of chocolate drops)

    We also know that:

    2.1 = c + j

    (Because the amount of jelly beans and chocolate chips together should be 2.1 pounds)

    So, we can rearrange the second equation to get:

    c = 2.1 - j

    then plug that into the original equation we made:

    1.56 = 0.98j + 0.67 (2.1 - j)

    Then use our algebra skills to solve for j, giving us:

    j = 153/310 = about 0.494

    now plug j into the "c = 2.1 - j" equation and solve for c algebraically:

    c = 249/155 = about 1.606

    So, that means it costs about $0.49 for one pound of jelly beans, and about $1.61 for one pound of chocolate drops.

    We can check that it's correct by plugging our values of c and j into our first equation:

    1.56 = 0.98j + 0.67c

    1.56 ~ 0.98 (0.49) + 0.67 (1.61)

    1.56 ~ 0.4802 + 1.0787

    1.56 ~ 1.5589
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