Wiki User
∙ 14y agoone half, one third, and one sixth
Wiki User
∙ 14y ago7/14, 4/8, 3/6
Equivalent fractions appear to be different values, but reduce to the same simplified form. They represent the same part of a whole.
-- Find a common denominator. (It will be a number of which all three denominators are factors. The best choice is their least common multiple.) -- Change the fractions to their equivalents with the common denominator. -- Then add their numerators to get the numerator of their sum.
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!
6 the lowest common denominator is the least common multiple of the denominators after both fractions have been simplified as far as possible. 3/6 can be simplified as 1/2. 2/3 cannot be simplified any further. The LCM of 3 and 2 is 6, so the lowest common denominator is 6.
When you want to add fractions that have different denominators, you have to convert them into fractions that do have the same denominators. So for example, how much is a half plus a third? Both of these can be converted into sixths, so one half equals three sixths, and one third equals two sixths. Three sixths plus two sixths equals five sixths. That's the answer. If you have three fractions with different denominators, the procedure is the same. Convert all three into fractions with the same denominators, then add them.
The denominators are different, so find the equivalent fractions using the LCD , then add the fractions with the denominators.
2/4 9/18 396/792
7/14, 4/8, 3/6
Equivalent fractions appear to be different values, but reduce to the same simplified form. They represent the same part of a whole.
-- Find a common denominator. (It will be a number of which all three denominators are factors. The best choice is their least common multiple.) -- Change the fractions to their equivalents with the common denominator. -- Then add their numerators to get the numerator of their sum.
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!
no never you can not 3 divide by 2 in fractions !
Least number is 120 if the three numbers are the denominators of fractions
6 the lowest common denominator is the least common multiple of the denominators after both fractions have been simplified as far as possible. 3/6 can be simplified as 1/2. 2/3 cannot be simplified any further. The LCM of 3 and 2 is 6, so the lowest common denominator is 6.
3/8 is simplified, there are no common denominators to further simplify. 3/8= 0.375
6/8 and 12/16. 3/4 is the simplified version of both of these fractions