If you mean this as a math problem, first find the price of popcorn in terms of cookies: for Julia, popcorn=$5-(2*price of cookies) for Marvin, popcorn=$6-(4*price of cookies) Then set the equations equal to each other and solve for the price of cookies: $5-(2*price of cookies)=$6-(4*price of cookies) -2poc+4poc=$6-$5 2poc=$1 poc=$.50 Then enter the price of cookies into the popcorn equation to solve for the price of popcorn: popcorn=$5-(2*$.50)=$4 Therefore, the price of popcorn is $4 while the cookies cost $.50
I think you can get them for about £40
You can sell a large bag of cookies for up to $12.00. The better the brand of cookies the higher the price.
The price for Girl Scout cookies for the years from 1995 to 1999 ranged from $2.50 to $3.00.
You are looking at it as how many cookies you get for the dollars, but the people doing the packaging are thinking how many dollars they can get for the cookies.
From 3.99 to 69.99!
The price for Girl Scout cookies in 1969, depending on the Girl Scout council, was from $0.50 to $1.00.
conduction is the reason why the cookies are like that
Anywhere from $1.50 for approx. 80 cookies (cheapo sandwich cookies) to ten or twenty dollars for very fancy cookies in small quantities. I mean, really, there is a cookie for every budget.
30 cookies for $6.45, because the unit price per cookie is lower
Hope bought 32 ounces of cookies for 4.12what was the approximate unit price of a pound of chocolate?
conduction is the reason why the cookies are like that