You do an integer division. The result of the division will be the whole number; put the remainder above the second number (the number you are dividing by). Simplify the resulting fraction in the usual way.
The quotient is larger than the original fraction.
The quotient is less than the fraction.
The quotient is the result when you divide a numerator of a fraction by the denominator
Neither. A fraction is a quotient. The line in a fraction can be read as "divided by." 3/4 is the same as 3 divided by 4. The 3 is the dividend, the 4 is the divisor and 3/4 is the quotient.
You do an integer division. The result of the division will be the whole number; put the remainder above the second number (the number you are dividing by). Simplify the resulting fraction in the usual way.
The answer of a fraction is called the quotient. In mathematical terms, the quotient is the result of dividing one number by another. For example, in the fraction 3/4, the quotient is 0.75 when 3 is divided by 4.
The quotient is larger than the original fraction.
Find the Highest Common Factor (HCF) of the numerator and denominator of the fraction. Divide both by their HCF and you will have the fraction in its simplest form.
The quotient is less than the fraction.
The quotient is the result when you divide a numerator of a fraction by the denominator
Neither. A fraction is a quotient. The line in a fraction can be read as "divided by." 3/4 is the same as 3 divided by 4. The 3 is the dividend, the 4 is the divisor and 3/4 is the quotient.
'Rational' in a mathematic sense means 'can be written as a finite fraction'. Since you can obviously write a fraction as a fraction - by a triviality - it is rational. Rational numbers also include the integers; however these can also be written as fractions in the form a/1, so technically every rational number is a fraction.Note to the author of the above quote: - I don't believe that is correct. Here's why:A fraction is a number that expresses part of a whole as a quotient of integers (where the denominator is not zero).A rational number is a number that can be expressed as a quotient of integers (where the denominator is not zero), or as a repeating or terminating decimal. Every fraction fits the first part of that definition. Therefore, every fraction is a rational number.But even though every fraction is a rational number, not every rational number is a fraction.Why? Consider this:Every integer (all the whole numbers, including zero, and their negatives....-3,-2,-1,0,1,2,3...) is a rational number, because it can be expressed as a quotient of integers, as in the case of 4 = 8/2 or 1 = 3/3 or -3 = 3/-1 and so on. So integers such as 4 or 1 can be expressed as the quotient of integers.But an integer is not a fraction. 4 is an integer, but it is not a fraction. 4 is not expressed as the quotient of integers. The difference here is in the wording.A fraction is a number that expresses part of a whole. An integer does not express a part. It only expresses a whole number.A rational number is a number that can be expressed as a quotient of integers, or as part of a whole, but fraction is a number that is (must be) expressed as a quotient of integers, or as part of a whole - there is a difference. The difference is subtle, but it is real.In a nutshell, the fractions are a subset of the rational numbers. The rational numbers contain the integers, and fractions don't.
Assume the term is 1/13. Then, it's in fraction form since it's the quotient of two values. If you want to determine 1 and 13 in fraction separately, then 1 is 1/1 [in fraction form] or 1 and 13 is 13/1 [in fraction form] or 13. 1 and 13 are actually whole numbers!
fractions divided to quotient
3.1111
quotient?