The result is called the quotient.
The result of two numbers being divided together is called the quotient.
The quotient.
The quotient
If there is an even number of data points in a set, there will two numbers which "share" the position of being the median; in this case the numbers are added together and the result divided by 2, to give the median for that set.
If you are asking what the result is called, there are two terms for it: difference, and remainder.
The resulting number is their "sum".
The two numbers that give you the quotient in a division operation are the dividend and the divisor. The dividend is the number being divided, while the divisor is the number by which the dividend is being divided. The result of the division operation is the quotient. For example, in the division problem 10 ÷ 2 = 5, 10 is the dividend, 2 is the divisor, and 5 is the quotient.
3. The quotient of two numbers is the result of division. In this case, 21 is the dividend, or the number being divided, and 7 is divider, or the number doing the dividing.
No, the ratio of two natural numbers can be positive, negative, or zero depending on the numbers being divided.
It is the result of two numbers being multiplied by each other.
All whole numbers can be divided by at least two numbers: 1 and the number itself. Additionally, all even whole numbers can be divided by two and all numbers ending in five can be divided by five.
Zero divided by any number is zero. If you start out with two numbers that aren't zero, then the result of a division is never zero.