Math, asked by siddhunh98, 5 months ago

(i) A piece of a rope is 10m 67cm long. Another rope is 16m and 32cm long. By how much is the second rope longer than the first one?

Answers

Answered by priyel
7

ANSWER:=>

 \huge\boxed{\bf\implies5.65 m \:  or  \: 5 m \:  65 cm.}

Step-by-step explanation:

 \bf \: Length \:  of  \: one \:  rope = 10 m 67 cm \\  \\  \bf Length  \: of  \: another \:  rope = 16 m \:  32 cm \\  \\  \bf Difference \:  in \:  length =  \frac{16 m \:  32cm}{100 cm} – \frac{ 10 m  \: 67cm}{100 cm}  \\  \\  \bf \implies:  16.32 m – 10.67 m  \\  \\    \boxed{\bf\implies5.65 m \:  or  \: 5 m \:  65 cm.}

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