An equal ratio is a ratio of equals. That's the answer, but it is obviously not clear. Here are some examples that will make it so. One to one. Ten to ten. Three and a half to three and a half. From a mathematical point of view, they're all the same (one to one equals ten to ten), but what's important is that however much of one thing one has, one will have an equal amount of the other if one has an equal ratio of those things. To make a dip for bread to cook up some french toast, use an equal ratio of milk and egg. Crack an egg (or eggs) into a tall glass. Look at the level. Add milk until the level is twice as high. There is a one-to-one ratio of egg to milk.
The ratio is 2/5.
It is 1/10.
Six to the nearest ten is ten. Three to the nearest ten is zero.
The difference of the ratio is three. 21 is three times larger than 7
You could say: ten point oh three ten point zero three ten and three hundredths.
Just divide thirty by ten to get three, and there you have it; three pounds is ten percent of thirty. This is proven by multiplying three by ten to get thirty.
Three ten-thousandths is 0.0003.
twenty three divide ten is two point three
Expressed as a ratio in its simplest terms, 105:150 is equal to 7:10, or seven to ten.
5:4, or 5 over 4
7/10 of 425 = 297.5