The concept of numbers going into one another makes sense only in the context of integers. In the set of rational numbers, such as one half, every non-zero number will go into it.
For example, consider p/q where p is not 0 and q > 0 so that p/q is a non-zero rational number.
Then p/q goes into a half because p/q*(q/2p) = 1/2.
Given the arbitrary choice for p/q, every rational number will go into 1/2.
1/4, and 1/3
No. One half is positive but not whole.
Not at all. Six times one half is three, and one half is not an integer.
No. One half is positive but not whole.
1,500,000
500,000
One-half and two.
To write the number fifteen and one half in numbers you could write it as: 15 1/2 or as 15.5
Yes, but you need two positive numbers less than one. 0.5 * 0.5 = 0.25 for instance. (half of a half is a quarter)
1.5 is rational. Rational numbers are numbers that can be written as a fraction. Irrational numbers cannot be expressed as a fraction.
It can't be one. Mixed numbers are greater than one.
You can have a box shape, with sides that have a length of any three numbers, as long as the product of these three numbers is one half.