Not necessarily.
A quotient of integers is the result of dividing one integer by another. When dividing two integers, the result may be a whole number if the division is exact, or a decimal/fraction if there is a remainder. For example, when dividing 10 by 2, the quotient is 5, which is also an integer.
The answer is always positive. If the signs are the same (positive by positive, negative by negative), then the quotient is always positive. If the signs are different (positive by negative, negative by positive), then the quotient is always negative.
The answer of a fraction is called the quotient. In mathematical terms, the quotient is the result of dividing one number by another. For example, in the fraction 3/4, the quotient is 0.75 when 3 is divided by 4.
When dividing a whole number by a fraction with a numerator of 1, you can think of the division as a fraction divided by a fraction. To find the quotient, you can multiply the whole number by the reciprocal of the fraction (flipping the fraction), which is essentially the same as multiplying by the fraction's denominator. This process is based on the concept that division is the same as multiplication by the reciprocal.
The answer is called the quotient.
Quotient is the number you get when dividing two numbers.
the quotient is always greater than the either fraction because any time when you multiply either number with 1 you will get the whole entire universe heheheheh
Rules for dividing by a fraction are multiply by the reciprocal. The reciprocal of a unit fraction is a whole number. Multiplying by a whole number will make the answer (quotient) larger. ex unit fraction 1/a 7 divided by 1/a = 7 x a/1 = 7a .... a times larger than 7.
quotient
the quotient
The word for the answer after dividing one number by another is the quotient.
You do an integer division. The result of the division will be the whole number; put the remainder above the second number (the number you are dividing by). Simplify the resulting fraction in the usual way.