Want this question answered?
Draw as many rectangles as the whole number you are multiplying by. Then, draw the fraction you are multiplying by in all of the rectangles. Shade in the top number in the fraction [numerator] in your rectangles. Count all the shaded in parts of all your rectangles. Leave the bottom number of your fraction [denominator] the same and put the number you got when you added the shaded parts of the rectangles on top as your denominator of the fraction. That is your answer!
No, you cannot use models to multiply fractions!!
24
graphs,tables and spread sheet are the three examples of models
we can make model by giving examples
14 -21
Draw as many rectangles as the whole number you are multiplying by. Then, draw the fraction you are multiplying by in all of the rectangles. Shade in the top number in the fraction [numerator] in your rectangles. Count all the shaded in parts of all your rectangles. Leave the bottom number of your fraction [denominator] the same and put the number you got when you added the shaded parts of the rectangles on top as your denominator of the fraction. That is your answer!
No, you cannot use models to multiply fractions!!
You can use models by doing simplify
24
We're having a lot of difficulty seeing the models from here.
Not necessarily. Models for faith, models for morals and conduct, and models for leadership are, for examples, not fake.
f6r6y
If you can compile a complete list of all different rectangular models with sides of integer length for a number then their lengths and breadths represent its factors.
Hi. Some examples includes- Organizations. Inferences. Visualities. And Predicting. These are just a few I know. :)
sculptures and models
graphs,tables and spread sheet are the three examples of models