It is: 2/5
2/5, both can be divided by 7. 14/7=2, 35/7=5
It is: 5 to 2
14/35 = 2/7 = 0.285714285 * * * * * WRONG! 14/35 is 2/5 = 0.4
Yes you can. 14/35 reduces to 2/5 14/7 = 2 and 35/7 = 5
It is: 2/5
2/5, both can be divided by 7. 14/7=2, 35/7=5
It is: 5 to 2
14/35 = 2/7 = 0.285714285 * * * * * WRONG! 14/35 is 2/5 = 0.4
These fractions are all equivalent in value: 2/7, 4/14, 6/21, 8/28, 10/35, 12/42, 14/49, and so on.
Yes you can. 14/35 reduces to 2/5 14/7 = 2 and 35/7 = 5
4/7 - 2/5 = 6/35. To subtract (or add) fractions make both fractions equivalent fractions with the same denominator. The LCM (Lowest Common Multiple) of 7 and 5 is 35, so convert both the fractions to equivalent fractions out of 35: 4/7 = 20/35 2/5 = 14/35 The subtraction can now be done: 4/7 - 2/5 = 20/35 - 14/35 = 6/35
What can 5 and 7 go into together? 35! So then it would be 14 over 35 and 5 over 35. I got the 14 from multiplying 7 to both the top and bottom of 2 over 5, so it would be: 2 x 7= 14, 1 x 5= 5 5 x 7= 35 and 7 x 5= 35 so 14 over 35 and 5 over 35.
14/35 (divide top and bottom by 7) =2/5
(3/7) - (2/5) = (15/35) - (14/35) = 1/35
No. 2/7 is twice as big as 2/14 .
2/5 + 6/7 = (2×7)/(5×7) + (6×5)/(7×5) = 14/35 + 30/35 = (14+30)/35 = 44/35 = (35+9)/35 = 1 9/35