divide the fraction by a common factor. Here p, it is 2. 6/2 is 3 and 10/2 is 5 so it is 2/5
2 over 3
2/5
2/8 4/16 6/24
3
Cross-simplification is a technique used to simplify the multiplication of fractions. It is possible when the fractions have common factors that can be divided out. For example the multiplication of the fractions 6/2 * 2/5 = (6*2)/(2*5). The 2's can be simplified out so that the multiplication is simply 6/1 * 1/5 = 6/5.
divide the fraction by a common factor. Here p, it is 2. 6/2 is 3 and 10/2 is 5 so it is 2/5
No, the fractions 2 over 3, and 2 over 6 the same? No, they are not the same. 2 over 6 is the same as 1 over 3. 2 over 3 is the same as 4 over 6. Smile.
2 over 3
To determine if 15/50 and 6/20 are equivalent fractions, we need to simplify both fractions to their simplest form. To simplify 15/50, we divide both the numerator and denominator by the greatest common factor, which is 5. This gives us 3/10. To simplify 6/20, we divide both the numerator and denominator by the greatest common factor, which is 2. This gives us 3/10. Since both fractions simplify to 3/10, 15/50 and 6/20 are indeed equivalent fractions.
You can:* Simplify the fraction 6/12 to simplest terms. * Expand the result, by adding top and bottom by any non-zero integer.
2/5
equivalent fractions of 1/3: 2/6, 3/92 equivalent fractions for 1 over 3 = 2/6, 3/9
2/8 4/16 6/24
3
There is only one way - make then into equivalent fractions with the same denominator and then add the numerators and simplify if possible. However, there are infinitely many equivalent fractions that can be used - all multiples of the lowest common multiple of 3 and 6 (which is 6) can be used as the denominator for the equivalent fractions.
If you mean simplify fractions, it means, well... here's an example: 2/4, if you simplify it, it will be 1/2 3/6=1/2 24/62=1/3