1/2 (one over two) is the simplified and more preferred fraction for 2/4 (two over four).
Do you know how to multiply fractions if the denominators are different ?Multiply the numerators to get the numerator and multiply denominatorsto get the denominator ? Is that right ?Well, that rule doesn't actually say anything about whether the denominatorsare the same or different, does it.That's because it doesn't matter. The rule is good either way.
You can buy a popular game, Pizza Fractions which has different ways for looking at and considering fractions.
There is only one way - make then into equivalent fractions with the same denominator and then add the numerators and simplify if possible. However, there are infinitely many equivalent fractions that can be used - all multiples of the lowest common multiple of 3 and 6 (which is 6) can be used as the denominator for the equivalent fractions.
That might refer to a fraction. In general you can convert decimals to fractions, and fractions to decimals.
Depends on how you use it, but on way to say it different is protect/er.
Change them into fractions over 10 or 100 and then order them
Convert the fractions to a common denominator - that way you can easily compare them.
7/13 + 2/7 = 75/91
The correct way is, "His shirt is different frommine"
Fractions are equivalent if they represent the same value or proportion, even if they have different numerators and denominators. One way to determine if two fractions are equivalent is to cross-multiply: if the cross products are equal, the fractions are equivalent. For example, for fractions a/b and c/d, if a * d = b * c, then the fractions are equivalent. Another method is to simplify both fractions to their lowest terms and see if they are the same.
The correct way is, "different from yours".
There are an infinite number of different fractions between two fractions. If you want the one that's exactly in the middle, half-way between them, there's only one of those. It's called the "average" of the two fractions. Find it like this: -- Add the two fractions together. -- Divide the sum by 2 .