In case of 3-way tie, the quotient system is computed by adding up the scores made by each team and the sum thereof, to be divided by the sum of the scores made by the opposing team. The team posting the highest quotient wins the tie.
The quotient has a positive sing in that case.
The quotient of 60 and 12 is 5. Quotient is the result of division, where the dividend (in this case, 60) is divided by the divisor (in this case, 12) to get the quotient (5). This means that if you divide 60 by 12, you will get 5 as the result.
The number 1. Unless the number is 0, in which case, the quotient is not defined.
To find the quotient, you divide the dividend by the divisor. In this case, 60 divided by 4 equals 15. Therefore, the quotient is 15.
No. When you divide a number by another number, let's say 26/4, you can't always get a perfect number. In this case, 6*4 is 24, and you have 2 "remainder", or 2 left over. The quotient is the whole answer, in this case 6 remainder 2. So the remainder is part of the quotient, but not the whole quotient itself.
7
Yes, it can be , for example 9/5 gives you quotient=1 and remainder =4 and other case 16/5 gives you quotient =3 and remainder = 1
A quotient is when two numbers are divided. For instance 20 ÷ 5 = 4 in this case, the quotient is 4.
the three second rule doesn't only apply to high school basketball, it applys to any basketball (including the NBA). The three second rule is when three seconds have been spent in the 'key' consecutively without exiting and re-entering the key. In which case, this is a turnover
In mathematics, a quotient is the result of division. The quotient is the result 8 here, while the number being divided is called the dividend, in this case 8.
Not if the second rational number is 0: in that case the quotient is not defined. Otherwise the answer is yes.
You can use the equation: quotient x divisor = dividend In case there is a remainder, the formula is: quitient x divisor + remainder = dividend