The name of an angle which is more than 90 degrees.
What is an obtuse angle?
A punctuation mark used to indicate either possession or the omission of letters or numbers.
What is an apostrophe?
Their, there or they're
The students all have to stay at _________houses.
What is their?
This is the name of the number below the line in a common fraction.
What is the denominator?
This Ms. Gage's first name.
What is Andrea?
The product of 4 and 3.
What is 12.
Punctuation marks placed on either side of a word or phrase in order to identify it as a quotation or direct speech.
What are quotation marks?
You're or your
__________going to have fun over the holidays.
What is you're?
What is an equivalent fraction?
This is Ms. Bardell's oldest son's name?
What is Isaac?
The name for a number which has more than two factors.
What is a composite number?
I was hungry but there was nothing I wanted to eat.
The word after which we should place a comma.
What is "hungry"?
to, too, two
I would love ______ go skiing today.
What is to?
1/3 of 9
What is 3?
This is Margaret's last name.
What is Burns?
2x3x5 is the prime factoring for this number.
What is 30?
The type of punctuation that goes at the end of an interrogative sentence.
What is a question mark?
then, than
It was colder ____________I had thought it would be.
What is than?
The sum of 1/2 , 1/4 and 1/4.
What is a whole (or 1)?
This is Madame Isabelle's last name.
What is Gagnon?
The product of 600 and 400.
What is 240,000?
This is the correct sentence.
1. "I love banana pancakes," exclaimed Ms. Bardell.
2. "I love banana pancakes" exclaimed Ms. Bardell.
3. "I love banana pancakes". exclaimed Ms. Bardell.
What is number 1?
accept, except
I decided to ______________the offer to go skiing with my friends.
What is accept?
The decimal value of 1/4.
What is 0.25?
This is Margaret's last name.
What is Burns?