No. A polynomial is two or more numbers connected with plus or minus signs.
A fraction is just a single number.
I guess you could call a fraction a "monomial" if you want to, but definitely not
a "polynomial".
Yes, the leading coefficient of a polynomial function can be a fraction. A polynomial is defined as a sum of terms, each consisting of a coefficient (which can be any real number, including fractions) multiplied by a variable raised to a non-negative integer power. Thus, the leading coefficient, which is the coefficient of the term with the highest degree, can indeed be a fraction.
Improper fraction is greater than a proper fraction.
proper fraction
you can say that it is polynomial if that have a exponent
Proper fraction is part to whole.
# A numerical fraction in which the numerator is less than the denominator. # A polynomial fraction in which the numerator is of a lower degree than the denominator.
Not necessarily. If the exponent is not an integer then it is not a polynomial.
Just write ANY fraction, with a polynomial in the numerator, and a polynomial in the denominator.
No, nothing like it.
Say we had 2 ½, so we would work it out like 4⁄4,+ 4⁄4 + ¼ = 9⁄4. The 9⁄4 is the improper fraction.
No.
Yes, the leading coefficient of a polynomial function can be a fraction. A polynomial is defined as a sum of terms, each consisting of a coefficient (which can be any real number, including fractions) multiplied by a variable raised to a non-negative integer power. Thus, the leading coefficient, which is the coefficient of the term with the highest degree, can indeed be a fraction.
Improper fraction is greater than a proper fraction.
proper fraction
Yes, every unit fraction is proper fraction because a proper fraction is a fraction in which the numerator is smaller than denominator. So the set of all unit fractions are also proper fractions.
A proper fraction is a fraction whose numerator is less than the denominator.
you can say that it is polynomial if that have a exponent