Multiply the numerators together. Multiply the denominators together. Put the new numerator over the new denominator. Reduce if possible.
get the common dinominators and do what u did to the denominator to the numerator!. ex: if I had three fractions with different denominators then I would multiply the denominators till they are the same number then with the number I multiplied with on the bottom I would multiply on to the top!
multiply the denominators
Multiply them by each other.
No.
Multiply any two denominators together. Their product will be a common denominator of them both.
Multiply two denominators together.
You can multiply the two denominators, or you can find the least common multiple for the two denominators.
Multiply them together.
When you're adding or subtracting fractions with different denominators, if you multiply the denominators that's your Quick Common Denominator. I'ts useful for denominators that don't have a low Least Common Factor.
Exactly the same as you do when multiplying fractions with different denominators. -- Multiply numerators . . . the product is the numeratore of the answer. -- Multiply denominators . . . the product is the denominator of the answer.
no, that's only if it's fractions.:}
YES.