4/4, 8/4, 12/4
There are infinitely many fractions between one sixth and three fifths.
75/100, 3/4, and 8/12 are three different equivalent fractions of 0.75
thirds
Whatever two fractions you name, no matter how close together they are, I can always name another fraction between them. In fact, there are an infinite number of fractions between any two fractions, no matter how close together they are. That goes for three-fourths and one-half.
1/2 = 2/4 = 4/8 are three different looking fractions that all mean the same, and are equivalent fractions.
no
There are infinitely many fractions between the two. Seven tenths is one example.
The three types of fractions are mixed, improper, and proper fractions.
When you want to add fractions that have different denominators, you have to convert them into fractions that do have the same denominators. So for example, how much is a half plus a third? Both of these can be converted into sixths, so one half equals three sixths, and one third equals two sixths. Three sixths plus two sixths equals five sixths. That's the answer. If you have three fractions with different denominators, the procedure is the same. Convert all three into fractions with the same denominators, then add them.
There are three types of fractions that are used in mathematics. The three types of fractions are, mixed fractions, proper fractions, and improper fractions.
1/2 = 2/4 = 4/8 are three different looking fractions that all mean the same, and are equivalent fractions.
The three improper fractions that equal the whole number 3 are 9/3, 6/2, and 3/1. These fractions show different ways to represent the whole number 3 using improper fractions.