Stay in Touch
Get sneak previews of special offers & upcoming events delivered to your inbox.
Sign in
06-04-2020 11:22 PM
If
@Love my grandkids wrote:I'm usually good at what I call "regular" math but never can figure out this kind of thing, never could in school either:
A merchant is offering something for $49 which is 75% off the regular price.
How do I figure out what the regular price is? Thanks!
We were taught to figure it out this way.
If $49 is 75% off, then $49 = 25% of the original price, which would be 100%.
$49 is to 25 (%) as $____ is to 100 (%).
Take the two numbers on the ends of the equation times each other and divide by the number in the middle of the equation.
49 x 100 = 4900. 4900 divided by 25 = 196.
Reverse the process if one of the end numbers of the equation is missing. Multiply by the two center numbers by each other and divide by the number on the end:
$____ is to 25% as $196 is to 100.
25 x196 =4900. 4900 divided by 100 = 49.
I can't remember when we were taught this, maybe 7th grade, but it has always stuck with me. Maybe pre-algebra, because we were trying to find an unknown number.
06-04-2020 11:28 PM
@Jersey Born wrote:@CLHS68 Is correct.
We know that if we take 100% of the price and subtract 75% from it, we will be left with 25% of the the full price.
$49 = 25% of the full price.
So, $49 = 1/4 of the full price, because 25%, or 25/100 can be reduced to 1/4.
You then set up an equation. 49 = 1 X is the number we want to determine.
X 4
Then, you cross multiply and get 1X = 49 times 4, or X = 196
So, the full price is $196.00.
good job......thanks for showing how you got there.
this is the way i learned it many years ago!
at least for math class. ![]()
06-04-2020 11:36 PM
@Susieq and @sunshine45 I wrote out my solution, because I wanted to help the original poster, using the method I was taught many years ago. Glad something stuck in my head from all those years ago!
06-04-2020 11:41 PM
@GrailSeeker wrote:If
@Love my grandkids wrote:I'm usually good at what I call "regular" math but never can figure out this kind of thing, never could in school either:
A merchant is offering something for $49 which is 75% off the regular price.
How do I figure out what the regular price is? Thanks!
We were taught to figure it out this way.
If $49 is 75% off, then $49 = 25% of the original price, which would be 100%.
$49 is to 25 (%) as $____ is to 100 (%).
Take the two numbers on the ends of the equation times each other and divide by the number in the middle of the equation.
49 x 100 = 4900. 4900 divided by 25 = 196.
Reverse the process if one of the end numbers of the equation is missing. Multiply by the two center numbers by each other and divide by the number on the end:
$____ is to 25% as $196 is to 100.
25 x196 =4900. 4900 divided by 100 = 49.
I can't remember when we were taught this, maybe 7th grade, but it has always stuck with me. Maybe pre-algebra, because we were trying to find an unknown number.
@GrailSeeker, Thank you! I'm taking a screenshot of this for future reference.
06-05-2020 03:02 AM
06-05-2020 05:28 AM
Well, math wasn't/isn't a strong suit of mine. LOL. To put it mildly.
Get sneak previews of special offers & upcoming events delivered to your inbox.
*You're signing up to receive QVC promotional email.
Find recent orders, do a return or exchange, create a Wish List & more.
Privacy StatementGeneral Terms of Use
QVC is not responsible for the availability, content, security, policies, or practices of the above referenced third-party linked sites nor liable for statements, claims, opinions, or representations contained therein. QVC's Privacy Statement does not apply to these third-party web sites.
© 1995-2025 QVC, Inc. All rights reserved. | QVC, Q and the Q logo are registered service marks of ER Marks, Inc. 888-345-5788