you find the highest number that goes into both the numerator and the denominatior and divide both by that number.
At least one other fraction is needed to determine a common denominator.
I believe it's the LCD, or least common denominator, and continue from there.
There is none because the Least Common Denominator (or LCD) is the Least Common Multiple (LCM) of the denominators of two or more fractions. Even if you converted your numbers (x) to their fraction equivalents (x/1), the LCD will always be 1.
There is none because the Least Common Denominator (or LCD) is the Least Common Multiple (LCM) of the denominators of two or more fractions. Even if you converted your numbers (x) to their fraction equivalents (x/1), the LCD will always be 1.
There is none because the Least Common Denominator (or LCD) is the Least Common Multiple (LCM) of the denominators of two or more fractions. Even if you converted your numbers (x) to their fraction equivalents (x/1), the LCD will always be 1.
That's one fraction. You need at least two to find something in common between them.
when i hear least common denominator i think of the word fraction
It can help by when finding the LCD (Least Common Denominator) you find the least number they have in common then that number is your equivalent fraction.
a least common (LCD) denominator is a least common multiple (LCM); only it's a fraction and it's LCM is in the denominator's place.
You need at least two fractions to determine a least common denominator.
No.
You need at least one more fraction in order to have a common denominator.
At least one other fraction is needed to determine a common denominator.
the least denominator is the bottom number of a fraction that u use the least
Find the least common denominator and convert each fraction to its equivalent. Example: 2/3 and 3/4 The least common denominator of 3 and 4 is 12. 2/3 = 8/12 3/4 = 9/12
You need at least two fractions to calculate a common denominator.
Find the least common denominator.