Yes, by definition. A rational number is one that can be written as a ratio (hence rational) of two whole numbers. And a ratio of two whole numbers is a fraction.
It depends on what type of numbers they are. A number that can be written as a ratio of 2 integers is a rational number. If one of the numbers is irrational or complex the answer is complicated.
A rational number is one which can be expressed as a ratio of two integers.
A rational number is one that can be written as a ratio - or fraction - between two integers. All integers can be written in the form (integer) / 1, and are therefore rational.
Yes. That in itself is the definition of a rational number. A rational number is one that can be expressed through a ratio of two integers using an integer numerator and denominator (so in simple terms, a fraction). A rational number is able to be written as a terminating decimal.
Yes, by definition. A rational number is one that can be written as a ratio (hence rational) of two whole numbers. And a ratio of two whole numbers is a fraction.
It depends on what type of numbers they are. A number that can be written as a ratio of 2 integers is a rational number. If one of the numbers is irrational or complex the answer is complicated.
Any number that can be written as the ratio of two non-zero integers, like 2/3 or -5 or one million.
A rational number is one that can be expressed as a fraction, or a ratio. Ratio is the basis for the word rational.-14/2 is a valid fraction that equals -7, so the answer is yes. ■
-- Any number that you can completely write down using digits, and a decimal point or fraction bar if needed, is rational. -- A rational number is defined as one that can be written as a fraction using whole numbers. -19 can be written as the fraction -19/1 .
A rational number is one that can be expressed as the ratio of two integers. All integers (which includes 51) are themselves rational numbers as they can be written 51 = 51/1
A rational number is one that can be written as a ratio of two integers. In this case the number 3.3333 can be written as the ratio: 33333/10000 If the intent was to write 3.3333... with the 3's repeating infinitely, it would be equivalent to 3 1/3 or 10/3.
A rational number is one which can be expressed as a ratio of two integers.
A rational number is one that can be written as a ratio - or fraction - between two integers. All integers can be written in the form (integer) / 1, and are therefore rational.
I have no idea what "compersion" means or what you are trying to say. A rational number is so called because it can be expressed as ratio of two integers. Each rational number is a ratio and each ratio is a rational number. However, the relationship is not one of equivalence: each rational number can be represented by infinitely many equivalent ratios.
Yes. That in itself is the definition of a rational number. A rational number is one that can be expressed through a ratio of two integers using an integer numerator and denominator (so in simple terms, a fraction). A rational number is able to be written as a terminating decimal.
A rational number is one that can be expressed as the ratio of two integers with the denominator not being zero. An irrational number is one that is not rational.