Irrational
The definition of an irrational number is that it cannot be expressed as the quotient of 2 integers, so no.
No. An irrational number cannot be expressed as the quotient of two integers. 35.6 = 356/10 and both 356 and 10 are integers. Hint: A terminating decimal is never irrational.
A number that cannot be expressed as the ratio of two integers is known as an irrational number.
Two integers can yield a quotient of zero when the numerator is zero and the denominator is any non-zero integer. For example, the integers 0 and 5 produce a quotient of 0 when 0 is divided by 5 (0 ÷ 5 = 0). However, dividing by zero is undefined, so the denominator cannot be zero.
The golden ratio is not a rational number. It cannot be expressed exactly as the quotient of two integers. It can be expressed as the quotient: (1+SQRT5)/2 where SQRT5 menas the square root of 5 (that is not a rational number either and so no quitient involving it is a rational number)
Pi is an example of anirrationalnumber that cannot be expressed as the quotient of two integers?
The definition of an irrational number is that it cannot be expressed as the quotient of 2 integers, so no.
5
Any number that cannot be expressed as the quotient of two integers.
Irrational number.
A number that cannot be expressed as a quotient of two integers is called an irrational number. Some common irrational numbers are pi (3.14159....) and the square root of two.
56.25% is not an integer and so cannot be expressed as a sum, difference, product or quotient of consecutive integers.
Pi is an irrational number, which is defined as one that cannot be expressed as a ratio or a quotient of two integers. So by definition, no. The values 22/7 and 355/113 come close, but neither is exactly pi.
An irrational number is a number that cannot be expressed as the quotient of two integers and is a continuous quantity.
WRONG!!!!! Irrational numbers CANNOT be expressed as a quotient(fraction). Casually, irrational numbers are those were the decimals go to infinity AND there is no regular order in the decimal digits. e.g. pi = 3.1415192.... is Irrational 3.3333.... is rational.
No. An irrational number cannot be expressed as the quotient of two integers. 35.6 = 356/10 and both 356 and 10 are integers. Hint: A terminating decimal is never irrational.
A number that cannot be expressed as the ratio of two integers is known as an irrational number.