It is an improper fraction.
Any fraction to the power of 0 will always equal 1 Any fraction that has the same numerator and denominator will also equal 1
That would be the numerator. The numerator is above the denominator. The numerator divided by the denominator would be equal to the quotient. So, numerator/denominator = quotient
Yes. If the numerator (on top) is higher or equal to the denominator (bottom) than its an improper fraction. If the numerator and denominator are the same then the fraction is considered a whole number and always comes out 1. If the numerator is higher than the denominator then you must divide the numerator by the denominator.
A fraction is in its simplest form if its denominator (bottom half of the fraction) and numerator (top half of the fraction) cannot be divided by the same number to equal a fraction with whole numbers in the numerator and denominator. [When you 'cancel' a fraction out (divide it to get a smaller fraction, closer to the simplest form) you must do the same sum to the numerator AND the denominator, so you must be able to divide the numerator by the same number you divide the numerator by, as the fraction cannot contain decimals or remainders (it must be a whole number] e.g. 3/6 is NOT in its simplest form, as you can divide both numbers by 3, meaning that the simplest form would be 1/3 1/3 is in its simplest form, as although you could divide the denominator by 3, you cannot divide the numerator by 3 to equal a whole number.
Rule #1 When two fractions have the same denominator, the bigger fraction is the one with the bigger numerator. Rule # 2 When comparing fractions that have the same numerator, the bigger fraction is the one with the smaller denominator. Rule # 3 You can convert the fractions and then just put the greater than, less than or equal to sign to see what the comparison is between the fractions.
An improper fraction is a fraction in which the numerator is greater than or equal to the denominator.
a fraction that has a numerator equal to the denominator is one: a fraction who's numerator is greater that the denominator is an improper fraction.
An improper fraction has a numerator greater than the denominator. When the numerator and denominator are equal, that's called "1."
An improper fraction has a numerator greater than the denominator. When the numerator and denominator are equal, that's called "1."
An improper fraction has a numerator greater than the denominator. When the numerator and denominator are equal, that's called "1."
improper fraction
It is an improper fraction.
That is called an improper fraction.
An improper fraction has a numerator greater than the denominator. When the numerator and denominator are equal, that's called "1."
That's an improper fraction.
is a fraction where the numerator is greater than or equal to the denominator.
It is called an improper fraction.