Yes the numerator is the shaded part
If one fifth of a region is not shaded then 4 fifths of the region is shaded. Fifths means there are five parts.
3 shaded blocks out of 10 is 3/10, or .3
The answer depends on what part of the figure is shaded!
If I understand you correctly, if 11/12 of the circle is shaded, then 1/12 is not shaded.
If part of a fraction is not shaded, it means that the shaded part represents the numerator (top number) of the fraction, and the unshaded part represents the denominator (bottom number). In fraction representation, the numerator indicates the number of parts that are shaded, while the denominator represents the total number of parts that make up the whole. Therefore, if part of the fraction is not shaded, it implies that those parts are not included in the numerator and are part of the whole represented by the denominator.
Yes the numerator is the shaded part
To find the area of the shaded part in a rectangle, you first find the total area of the rectangle by multiplying its length by its width. Then, you subtract the area of the non-shaded part from the total area to get the area of the shaded part. The formula would be: Area of shaded part = Total area of rectangle - Area of non-shaded part
What do you call shaded part?
0. Since there is no shaded part visible.
If 5.7 of a region is shaded, then 94.3% of the region is not shaded. This can be calculated by subtracting the shaded percentage from 100%.
It is called the shaded part!
I see no shaded part fo the fraction must be "none".
If one fifth of a region is not shaded then 4 fifths of the region is shaded. Fifths means there are five parts.
Either directly or by finding the area of the whole and subtracting the area of the non-shaded part.
3 shaded blocks out of 10 is 3/10, or .3
None, since there is no shaded part of any figure!