There are two halves in one. a half (1/2) is 1 out of two
half of six is three -so there are six halves in three.
You multiply two halves, the equivalent of four, by four to get a product of 8 halves. Then add the "extra" half from the original "four and one half" to get nine halves.
One. Once you half it, it is 2 and so no longer 4.
Each whole is two halves, so eight wholes are sixteen halves. Adding one half makes the total seventeen halves. Reducing this, of course, is simply eight and one-half.
11
5 wholes = ten halves plus one half = 11 halves
there are 2 halves in one so in 12wholes there are 12x2 =24 then you must add the other half 24+1=25
9
five
One half is 1 of 2 parts of ANYTHING. So there are 2 halves in everything, always 2 because that is what half means. Half of anything is always equal to the other half, it doesn't matter if it is the whole universe, or an orange, or an atom. One half plus the other half equals one whole.
no
8 wholes with one half left over
six and one half = 13/2 or thirteen halves
10.5/0.5 = 21
There are two halves in a whole ounce.
An estimate of this should lead directly to an answer. Six is equal to six times one. That's kinda obvious, but we need to look at the one. One half will go into that one about two times, so there are about two halves in a one. Since there are six ones in a six and two halves in a one there must be six times two halves in a six. That's about twelve halves. Six is equal to six times one or six ones. There are two one halves in a one, or two halves in a one. As there are two halves in a one and there are six ones in a six, there are two times six halves in a six. There are about twelve halves in a six.