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All numbers -with the exception of zero- have, and are, reciprocals. A reciprocal of a number is 1 divided by that number (so the reciprocal of 22 is 1/22). So a reciprocal isn't actually anything special in itself, it just has a particular relationship with another unique number.
A number's reciprocal could be called a multiplicative inverse.
In the context of real numbers, only the number 0.
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All numbers -with the exception of zero- have, and are, reciprocals. A reciprocal of a number is 1 divided by that number (so the reciprocal of 22 is 1/22). So a reciprocal isn't actually anything special in itself, it just has a particular relationship with another unique number.
It is: 3/4 times 4/3 = 1 Any number times its reciprocal is 1.
The reciprocal of a number is 1 divided by the number. Alternatively, a number and its reciprocal make a pair such that they always multiply to make 1.
A number's reciprocal could be called a multiplicative inverse.
Calculate 1 / 0.02 - that is the reciprocal of 0.02 (and 0.02 is the reciprocal of that number).
Many numbers are like this. One example is 101, 202, 1991, and so on. There is a pattern there- a reciperical of a number is simply the number backwards.
Fifteen is three-fourths of what number?
In the context of real numbers, only the number 0.
Taking the reciprocal (multiplicative inverse) does not affect the positive or negative status of an integer. So the reciprocal of a negative number is negative and the reciprocal of a positive number is positive. The reciprocals will be opposites (positive/negative) just as the original numbers were.
the reciprocal of a number is 1 divided by the number. if you want to find the reciprocal of a fraction you would need to swap the fraction numbers around and then multiply by 1. and then divide the answer.It is 1 divided by the number.
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