Question: The swimming club went to a swim meet in another town. They took 2 cars and 3 vans. There were 5 people in each car and 3 people in each van. Each car can hold a maximum of 6 people and each van can hold a maximum of 8 people. How many more people could have ridden with the swim team?
Answer: Step-by-step reasoning process: The available number of people in each car is 6 * 2 cars = 12 people. The available number of people in each van is 8 * 3 vans = 24 people. The total number of people that could go with the team is 12 people + 24 people = 36 people. The team took with them 2 cars * 5 people = 10 people. The team also took 3 vans * 3 people = 9 people. The team brought 10 people + 9 people = 19 people. The team could bring an additional 36 people - 19 people = 17 people.
So the answer is 17.

Question: Jack says he has 13 more notebooks in his bag than Gerald. Jack gives 5 notebooks to Paula and 6 notebooks to Mike. If Gerald has 8 notebooks, how many notebooks does Jack have left?
Answer: Step-by-step reasoning process: Jack had 13 more than 8 notebooks for a total of 13 + 8 = 21 notebooks. He gave 5 notebooks to Paula so he has 21 - 5 = 16 notebooks left. He gave another 6 to Mike so he has 16 - 6 = 10 notebooks left.
So the answer is 10.

Question: Dulce's father has eight orange trees on his farm. If each tree has 200 fruits and Dulce picks 2/5 of the oranges from each tree, calculate the total number of fruits remaining in all the trees.
Answer: Step-by-step reasoning process: The total number of oranges in all the trees before Dulce picked any is 8 trees * 200 oranges / tree = 1600 oranges. If each orange tree has 200 oranges, and Dulce picks 2 / 5 of each tree's oranges, she picks 2 / 5 * 200 oranges = 80 oranges. Since the total number of orange trees is eight, Dulce picked 8 trees * 80 oranges / tree = 640 oranges from all the trees. After picking 640 oranges from the trees, the total number of oranges remaining became 1600 oranges - 640 oranges = 960 oranges.
So the answer is 960.

Question: The largest frog can grow to weigh 10 times as much as the smallest frog. The largest frog weighs 120 pounds. How much more does the largest frog weigh than the smallest frog?
Answer:
Step-by-step reasoning process: To find the weight of the smallest frog, 120 pounds / 10 = 12 pounds for the smallest frog. The difference is 120 - 12 = 108 pounds.
So the answer is 108.