When you sort a row in Word 2013, you arrange the rows based on specific criteria, such as alphabetical order or numerical value, using one or more columns as the basis for sorting. You can choose to sort in ascending or descending order and specify whether the sorting should be case-sensitive. This feature is commonly used for organizing lists, tables, or any data arranged in a row format.
Carefully arrange 12 rows with 8 coins in each row.
by 2 rows
90000
Oh, dude, arranging 6 counters in equal rows is like a puzzle, man. So, if you're into math and stuff, there are 720 different ways you can do it. But hey, who's counting, right? Just go with the flow and arrange those counters however you like.
Yes, each would have 14, as 14 x 4 = 56.
13 rows of 7 7 rows of 13
You can't arrange 12 apples into 5 rows with four in each. To do that you would need 20 apples because 5 rows of 4 = 20 or 5x4=20. You can arrange 12 apples into 3 groups of 4 because 3x4=12
8
You can have: 1 row of 36 2 rows of 18 3 rows of 12 4 rows of 9 or 6 rows of 6, so in total there are 5 ways.
To arrange 25 cans into arrays, you can form different rectangular configurations based on the factors of 25. The pairs of factors are (1, 25), (5, 5), and (25, 1). This means you can have 1 row of 25 cans, 25 rows of 1 can, or a square array of 5 rows and 5 columns. These are the only distinct ways to arrange 25 cans into arrays.
You could try 1 row of 91 or 7 rows of 13.
You cannot. Two rows and one column are good for only two numbers.