17/20, 85%
The 2 questions that were wrong equals 25% of the score because each question is 12.5%. So if 2 questions out of 8 were wrong the score would come out to 75%. The equation to get the answer is (100 / 8 = 12.5) So (12.5 x 2 = 25) Now that you know that the questions that were answered wrong equals 25% just do (100% - 25% = 75%) So then 75% is your answer.
Your score is 66.67%
87.5%
-- Your score would be 26 percent.-- Your grade is really up to the teacher. But I can't imagine that any teacherwould give you anything better than ' F ', or say that you 'passed' the test, witha score of 26 percent.
that's very good then that's 28 you got right try asking your teacher for the percent
A fish is sick or something is wrong with the water.
Your score would be 76.9%
you would get a 70
Your score would be 90.91%
The score would be 56%
The answer would depend on what is wrong with it. You would WRITE it as seventy one thousand twenty.
If two or three contestants are tied for first place following Final Jeopardy! during non-tournament play, both (or all three) are declared co-champions and appear on the next episode. Just because they all got the question wrong does not mean they can not win with a score of zero. Whether you got final jeopardy wrong is not a factor in determining the winner and in your description they all would have tied with a score of zero. The person with the highest score before the final wager would failed to play smart and wagered more than what was needed to win the game
Yes, it is perfectly alright, especially if you actually mean twenty-five years have gone!But if you mean 'a score and five years have passed', then this is what you should say!Your style seems rather poetic, but there nothing wrong with 'poetic.'Another way to express 25 years is 'five and twenty years.'
Always check your card thoroughly before signing it. If the marker has put down a wrong score, you ask him to change it and then you should both initial it. If you sign the score card and realise a wrong score, you are disqualified.
The English words for the numbers between 21 and 40 are:twenty-onetwenty-twotwenty-threetwenty-fourtwenty-fivetwenty-sixtwenty-seventwenty-eighttwenty-ninethirtythirty-onethirty-twothirty-threethirty-fourthirty-fivethirty-sixthirty-seventhirty-eightthirty-nineforty
In the PSAT, just as in the AP and SAT, if you guess at an answer and get it wrong you lose one quarter of a point. For each question you answer correctly, you gain one point. Therefore if you got 4 questions wrong and one right, you would have a total score of zero. If you had skipped those 4 questions you got wrong, you would have a total score of one.
56%