Multiply the numerator and the denominator by the same integer.
An equivalent fraction is the same part of a whole.Example: would be two over three and EIGHT over twelve.it is equivalent(same as) to another fraction or whole numberAn equivalent fraction is one that is a multiple of the original. 1/2 is equivalent to 2/4.a equivalent fraction is when the value is the same but the numbers don't look the same
An equivalent fraction is the same part of a whole.Example: would be two over three and EIGHT over twelve.it is equivalent(same as) to another fraction or whole numberAn equivalent fraction is one that is a multiple of the original. 1/2 is equivalent to 2/4.a equivalent fraction is when the value is the same but the numbers don't look the same
The same fraction.
A fraction multiplied by its reciprocal is always equal to one. This is because the reciprocal is an inversion of the fraction. The denominator of a fraction is the same number as the numerator of the reciprocal, and vice versa. The product of this is a fraction with the same numbers for the denominator and reciprocal, which is also known as an equivalent fraction. Equivalent fractions are always equal to one.
You are working with numbers. One is a whole number and the other is a fraction of a whole number (with a decimal point, etc). You apply the same principles of subtracting one number from another or a fraction of one number from a fraction of another. Numbers is numbers!
Multiply the numerator and denominator of the fraction you already have, both by the same number. The result will be a new fraction that's equivalent to the original one.
Not sure about a "valuger" fraction but a vulgar fraction is the same as a common fraction: written as one integer above (or before) a line (slash) and another non-zero integer below (after) it.This is in contrast to mixed fractions, decimal fractions, percentages or those indicated by negative indices (for example 3-2 is one ninth).Not sure about a "valuger" fraction but a vulgar fraction is the same as a common fraction: written as one integer above (or before) a line (slash) and another non-zero integer below (after) it.This is in contrast to mixed fractions, decimal fractions, percentages or those indicated by negative indices (for example 3-2 is one ninth).Not sure about a "valuger" fraction but a vulgar fraction is the same as a common fraction: written as one integer above (or before) a line (slash) and another non-zero integer below (after) it.This is in contrast to mixed fractions, decimal fractions, percentages or those indicated by negative indices (for example 3-2 is one ninth).Not sure about a "valuger" fraction but a vulgar fraction is the same as a common fraction: written as one integer above (or before) a line (slash) and another non-zero integer below (after) it.This is in contrast to mixed fractions, decimal fractions, percentages or those indicated by negative indices (for example 3-2 is one ninth).
To divide a fraction by another fraction, you multiply by the reciprocal - that is, in the second fraction you exchange numerator and denominator, while at the same time changing the division to a multiplication.Example: 5 divided by one-and-a-half5 / (1 1/2) = 5 / (3/2) = 5 x (2/3)To divide a fraction by another fraction, you multiply by the reciprocal - that is, in the second fraction you exchange numerator and denominator, while at the same time changing the division to a multiplication.Example: 5 divided by one-and-a-half5 / (1 1/2) = 5 / (3/2) = 5 x (2/3)To divide a fraction by another fraction, you multiply by the reciprocal - that is, in the second fraction you exchange numerator and denominator, while at the same time changing the division to a multiplication.Example: 5 divided by one-and-a-half5 / (1 1/2) = 5 / (3/2) = 5 x (2/3)To divide a fraction by another fraction, you multiply by the reciprocal - that is, in the second fraction you exchange numerator and denominator, while at the same time changing the division to a multiplication.Example: 5 divided by one-and-a-half5 / (1 1/2) = 5 / (3/2) = 5 x (2/3)
in fraction it is 1/4
Same as a proper one. Find the GCF of the numerator and the denominator and divide them both by it. If the GCF is 1, the fraction is in its simplest form.
Find the least common denominator and convert them to equivalent fractions so that the denominators are the same. Choose the one with the greatest denominator.
To divide one fraction by another fraction,flip the second one over and multiply them.