| 
 
 
| Question 17154:  I REALLY NEED HELP WITH SETTING UP THIS WORD PROBLEM!!!  PLEASE HELP!  I HAVE WORKED ON IT FOR HOURS AND JUST CAN'T GET TO WORK.  THANKS!!
 
 
 Andrew has $547 in ten-dollar, five-dollar, and one-dollar bills.  There were 91 bills in all, and 10 more five-dollar bills than ten-dollar bills. How many one dollar bills does Andrew have?
 
 Answer by stanbon(75887)
      (Show Source): 
You can put this solution on YOUR website! To solve this you need  "quantity" information  and  "value" information. Quantity Information is as follows:
 Let "x" be the number of ten-dollar bills.
 Then "x+10" is the number of five-dollar bills.
 And 91-(x+x+10)= [91-2x-10]=[81-2x] one-dollar bills.
 Value information:
 Value of the ten-dollar bills is 10x
 Value of the 5=dollar bills is 5(x+10)=5x+50
 Value of the 1-dollar bills is 1[81-2x]
 Equation:
 Value of 10-dollar + Value of 5-dollar + Value of 1-dollar = 547 dollars
 10x + 5x+50 + 81-2x = 547
 13x +81 = 547
 13x     = 466
 x     = 35.85 (number of 10-dollar bills)
 That doesn't make any sense.  I suspect you did not post the information
 stated in your problem regarding regarding how the number of one-dollar
 bills relates to the number of ten-dollar bills.  Check your problem
 statement.
 Cheers,
 Stan H.
 
 | 
  
 | 
 |