1/6 because OOOOOO
3/10 are shaded.
It is difficult to say since there is no image and it is not clear what part is shaded. But, if there is a circle with a 12 metre diameter which contains two equal circles which are as large as possible, then the shaded area is probably 56.55 square metres.
The shaded portion of the diagram represents the fraction ( \frac{4}{9} ), as 4 out of the 9 equal parts are shaded. This indicates that 4 parts are shaded while 5 parts remain unshaded, highlighting the relationship between the shaded and total parts. Thus, the fraction of the shaded area is ( \frac{4}{9} ).
2
The fraction of shaded areas is 5/10 = 5 ÷ 10 = 0.5
The shaded parts
I see no shaded part fo the fraction must be "none".
3/10 are shaded.
It is difficult to say since there is no image and it is not clear what part is shaded. But, if there is a circle with a 12 metre diameter which contains two equal circles which are as large as possible, then the shaded area is probably 56.55 square metres.
False
Depends on which part is shaded.
5/8 of it.
To write the number of shaded parts, you count the total number of shaded parts in the figure. To express the fraction of the whole that is shaded, you write the number of shaded parts over the total number of equal parts that make up the whole figure. For example, if there are 3 shaded parts out of a total of 8 equal parts, you would write this as "3/8."
A shade circle ontop of a shaded square. ES
It is called the shaded part!
0. Since there is no shaded part visible.
4 and a half