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Answer :

Step-by-step explanation:

"times" is always the indication for multiplication. we do things over and over again so and so many times.

like when adding the same number several times.

e.g.

3+3+3+3+3

then I added the number 3 five times.

now, I could do all the basic additions, or I could simply say 3×5.

a multiplication is simply the short form of doing the same addition multiple times.

of course, in such a simple example we could easily do both, but it really gets annoying to do e.g. 3256 × 635 as single additions ...

so, the original question was : how many times as many dimes does he have than quarters?

he has 10 dimes and 2 quarters.

so, the numbers in play are 10 and 2.

therefore, the question really is, how many times is 10 of 2 ? or nicer : how many times of 2 is 10 ?

how often, how many times do I need to add 2 to get 10 ?

so, what do I need to multiply with 2 to get 10 ?

I am sure, you see the answer already.

formally in math we try to express such "riddles" as equations with the unknown and to be determined element as a generic variable named most of the time by a single letter like "x".

so, or problem here looks like

2*x = 10

"x" is what I have to multiply 2 with to get 10.

what value is that "x" ?

well, the beauty of such an equation is - we simplify it by performing the same operation on both sides of the "=" sign without changing its meaning.

so, we can divide both sides by 2 and get

x = 10/2 = 5

and that is our solution and answer.

he has 5 times as many dimes as he has dollars.