Yes the numerator is the shaded part
If one fifth of a region is not shaded then 4 fifths of the region is shaded. Fifths means there are five parts.
3 shaded blocks out of 10 is 3/10, or .3
The answer depends on what part of the figure is shaded!
If I understand you correctly, if 11/12 of the circle is shaded, then 1/12 is not shaded.
Leave at least one element of the group and take the rest. You will have a fractional part of the group.
Yes the numerator is the shaded part
What do you call shaded part?
0. Since there is no shaded part visible.
If 5.7 of a region is shaded, then 94.3% of the region is not shaded. This can be calculated by subtracting the shaded percentage from 100%.
To find the area of the shaded part in a rectangle, you first find the total area of the rectangle by multiplying its length by its width. Then, you subtract the area of the non-shaded part from the total area to get the area of the shaded part. The formula would be: Area of shaded part = Total area of rectangle - Area of non-shaded part
It is called the shaded part!
I see no shaded part fo the fraction must be "none".
The fractional part of a logarithm is called the Mantissa.
If one fifth of a region is not shaded then 4 fifths of the region is shaded. Fifths means there are five parts.
Either directly or by finding the area of the whole and subtracting the area of the non-shaded part.
Oh, dude, if part of the fraction isn't shaded, then that means it's not included in the value of the fraction. It's like having a pizza and only eating half of it - the other half is just there, chilling, not affecting the part you actually consumed. So yeah, if it's not shaded, it's basically like it doesn't exist in the fraction world.