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6 answers

700 km
Figure problems like this by using their labels. Then you can figure out what to do to create the answer you want.
We want distance for our answer...kilometers.
So, if we multiply 50 km/hour x 14 hour , then the hours will cancel out and leave only 50 km x 14 = 700 km.

2007-10-14 14:32:26 · answer #1 · answered by ignoramus 7 · 0 0

Everyone here has the 700 KM right but in miles the distance would be a different number. You have to figure a Kilometer is about 1/2 or a bit more per hour. So about 350 miles (give or take) but these boats change their speed all the time.

2007-10-17 04:44:41 · answer #2 · answered by oakbridge 2 · 0 0

50km per hour means that every hour the ship will go 50 kilometers (km)

So if the ship went for 14 hours, and each hour it goes 50 kilometers, multiply 14 x 50 and you get 700.

So the ship will have traveled 700 kilometers at the end of the 14 hours.

2007-10-14 14:34:32 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

14 x 50 km/hr = 700 km in 14 hours.

2007-10-14 14:34:37 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

velocity = 50 km/hr Time = 14 hr Distance = velocity x time = 50 km/hr x 14 hr = seven-hundred km... See how the hr instruments cancel one yet another out.... that tells you your equation is physically powerful. in case you ended with something, (hrs, hrs/km, miles) you would be attentive to it became into incorrect....get it ? Km is a diploma of distance and that's what they're asking for, distance.

2016-10-09 05:59:54 · answer #5 · answered by buswell 4 · 0 0

depends on what stops it makes. 700k if it goes straight through, if it stops could be anyones guess.

2007-10-14 14:36:17 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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