You could represent it as 4/8.
75 is an integer, not a fraction. As a decimal it is 75, exactly as in the question.
One eighth would be left.
It is approx 105/5189.
It can't be one. Improper fractions are greater than 1.
To represent 68% as a fraction, you would write it as: 68 ---- 100 Then, we need to simplify that. The greatest common factor between 68 and 100 is 4, so we divide both sides by 4. We then end up with: 17 -- 25 So 68% represented as a fraction is 17/25
What's the time signature? If it's the common 4/4, then there would be two eighth notes in one beat.
In 4/4 time, 44 eighth notes are equal to 22 beats. Since each quarter note is equivalent to two eighth notes, 44 eighth notes can be grouped into 22 quarter notes, fitting neatly within the measure. Thus, in terms of measures, 44 eighth notes would fill 5 and a half measures in 4/4 time.
Depends on the time signature. In 4/4 a whole note is 4 beats and there would be 8 eighth notes.
To determine how many eighth notes it takes to equal 4 counts, we first note that each count typically represents a quarter note in common time. Since there are two eighth notes in each quarter note, it would take 8 eighth notes to equal 4 counts (4 quarter notes). Therefore, 8 eighth notes equal 4 counts.
Oh, this can be so tricky, depending on the meter of the piece in question and how complex the passage is. The quick and dirty answer is that a dotted eighth has the value of three sixteenth notes. You can see that two eighth notes would be equal to 4 sixteenth notes, right? If you pair a dotted eighth note with a sixteenth note (you will see this very often: the two notes are connected with one flag/bar, the dot comes with the first note, and there is an added flag/bar segment to the second note that is short; it doesn't extend back to the first note) then the dotted eighth takes the place of the first 3 sixteenth notes in a group of four sixteenths.
If after means shorter length, then that would be a sixteenth note. Two sixteenth notes equal an eighth note.
2 apparently according the question I just got asked on 'Are you smarter than a 5th Grader' on Facebook ;]
Well. in a 4 pattern time signature, a dotted half note get s 3 full beats and eight notes get half a beat. therefore, 2 eighth notes equals one beat, and three sets of two (or 6 eighth notes) equals 3 beats, the same number of beats as a dotted half note. Just to be clear though: 6 eighth notes would not be played as the rythym pattern as a dotted half note.
An eighth note gets one half of a beat.
75 is an integer, not a fraction. As a decimal it is 75, exactly as in the question.
If you had 8 oranges then 1 orange would be one eighth.
. One beat. [[... Not quite. That is only true if the time signature has a 4 in the lower half. This means the beat is a quarter note. If your signature is 7/8 (for example) this means that there are 7 beats per measure and the eighth note gets the beat. In a given time signature and tempo, it would take the same amount of time to play two eighth notes as it would to play one quarter note.]]