Nothing specifically. In the context of speed, it counts the time period; for density, it counts the volume; for the force acting between two electrical charges it measures the square of the distance between the charges and so on.
To count 3/8 in a fraction, you would divide the numerator (3) by the denominator (8) to get the decimal equivalent, which is 0.375.
Count the number of digits after the decimal point. The denominator is 1 followed by the same number of 0s.So, for example, 12.0356 has 4 digits after the decimal place. Therefore the denominator is 10000, and the rational form is 120356/10000
No because 13 Is not a common denominator so it would not count as simplest
The numerator is 5x and denominator 6y 5x times 6 y = 30 xy = 270 xy = 9 thus x = 9 and y = 1 or x = 1 and y = 9 is only solution 45/6 is the fraction, or 5/54
0 cannot be the denominator, but all numbers can be in the denominator.If the whole denominator equals 0 (so things like 3+0 or y+0 wouldn't count) then the fraction's value is undefined since no number can be divided by 0 and give one answer. But if the question is exactly as it is phrased, there is no number that can never be in the denominator.
Down To Earth, Bigger and First Dance. and Common Denominator if you count that on the My World album :)
A common denominator is 7.A common denominator is 7.A common denominator is 7.A common denominator is 7.
There can be no answer to the question because it is based on a false assumption.0.3333... repeating = 1/3 : I don't see any 9s in the denominator!or 0.0111... repeating = 11/990 : I would not consider the last digit in the denominator to be 9.Having said that, the significance of 9 is that we count in blocks of one more: 10s.
0.77 is what in fraction form?Count the places to the right of the decimal. Since there are 2 decimal places, the denominator will be 100 and the numerator will be 77. Therefore, your answer is: 77/100.
A Denominator. no problemo...The denominator.
Numerator on top; denominator on the bottom.
Like denominator is the same denominator as the nonzero numbers.