"divided by"
38 is not a fraction.
The numerator in a fraction is above the line.
A fraction names part of a region or part of a group. The top number of a fraction is called its numerator and the bottom part is its denominator. They are separated by a line called a "fraction bar."
Well, darling, that little number below the line in a fraction is called the denominator. It's basically playing second fiddle to the numerator, which gets all the attention. Think of it as the sidekick in the fraction world.
Yes it can be because a rational number is a number that can be written as a ratio with a fraction with denominator on top and numerator on bottom. You can turn the ratio into decimal or any ways you can and you can find it on a number line...
The line that separates the top number (numerator) from the bottom number (denominator) of a fraction can be called a dividing line - since this is what is happening in the sum itself to calculate the fraction.
The line between the numerator and the denominator of a fraction is the the solidus line
This is the denominator, which is the bottom line of the fraction.
38 is not a fraction.
On the number line it is 3/1
There are three parts to a fraction, there is the numerator (the top number), the denominator (the bottom number) and the vinculum (the line in the middle which means 'divide by'-
If it is a number that also has a number below the line, it is a fraction. A fraction is a number where the top number is divided by the bottom number. For example, 3/4 is 3 divided by 4, which in decimal form is .75, or 75/100 in fraction form.
The numerator in a fraction is above the line.
As the denominator increases the fraction will be smaller but there is no limit to how tiny that fraction can be. So between any two numbers on the number line, you can have an infinite number of fractions.
The number at the top of a fraction is called the numerator.(The number at the bottom is the denominator.)
A fraction names part of a region or part of a group. The top number of a fraction is called its numerator and the bottom part is its denominator. They are separated by a line called a "fraction bar."
Well, darling, that little number below the line in a fraction is called the denominator. It's basically playing second fiddle to the numerator, which gets all the attention. Think of it as the sidekick in the fraction world.