i think no * No. Take a second to think about it- if you take a pie and cut it into nine equal slices, is one slice bigger than five slices?
eleven eighteenths
There are 9 ninths in a unit - seven ninths is less than nine ninths, so 7/9 <1 To visualise it, try this: Cut a pizza into nine equal slices - if they are not equal, pretend they are. If you take seven of these nine slices, you have seven ninths of a pizza. Is that not less than the whole ONE?
50 pounds for quarter pound sandwiches, or 66.6 pounds for third pound sandwiches.
It is: 8/9 minus 5/6 = 1/18
You flat the third and the sixth and seventh.
i think no * No. Take a second to think about it- if you take a pie and cut it into nine equal slices, is one slice bigger than five slices?
eleven eighteenths
A little more than one third of a tree is needed to make 3,000 sheets of copy paper
There are 9 ninths in a unit - seven ninths is less than nine ninths, so 7/9 <1 To visualise it, try this: Cut a pizza into nine equal slices - if they are not equal, pretend they are. If you take seven of these nine slices, you have seven ninths of a pizza. Is that not less than the whole ONE?
No. 5 ninths is 5 parts out of 9. 000000000 11111 1 half is half of any value. 00000000 1111 No. Five ninths is greater than one half because if you take half of nine then it would be 4 and a half and five is greater then 4 in a half. So that means that five ninths is greater then one half. Hope this helped! No. Five ninths is greater than one half because if you take half of nine then it would be 4 and a half and five is greater then 4 in a half. So that means that five ninths is greater then one half. Hope this helped!
2,8,8,2
Thirty Three Thousand and one third, 30 dollar groups to make a million dollars. It's not rocket science.
50 pounds for quarter pound sandwiches, or 66.6 pounds for third pound sandwiches.
It is: 8/9 minus 5/6 = 1/18
Two of them.
Well, isn't that a happy little question! Two ninths of h in an expression simply means you take h and divide it by 9, then multiply the result by 2. It's like adding a touch of sunshine to your painting - just a gentle way to bring out the beauty of math.