12/2, 18/3, 24/4, 30/5, 36/6, 42/7
It is 5/6.
To determine if the fractions ( \frac{4}{5} ) and ( \frac{5}{6} ) are equal, we can find a common denominator or cross-multiply. Cross-multiplying gives us ( 4 \times 6 = 24 ) and ( 5 \times 5 = 25 ). Since ( 24 \neq 25 ), the fractions ( \frac{4}{5} ) and ( \frac{5}{6} ) are not equal.
6/1
The mixed number ( 2 \frac{6}{1} ) can be converted to an improper fraction, which is ( \frac{12}{5} ). Other fractions that equal ( 2 \frac{6}{1} ) include ( \frac{24}{10} ) and ( \frac{36}{15} ), as these fractions can be simplified to the same value. All these fractions represent the same quantity as ( 2 \frac{6}{1} ).
There are infinite equivalent fractions, because 6/10 can be equal to 6,000/10,000. The amount of equivalent fractions with smaller numerals is 1; 3/5
It is 5/6.
5/6 is equal to 10/12 or 15/18
6/5, 12/10
6/10, 3/5
0.6 is six tenths, which is equal to 6/10, or 3/5.
To determine if the fractions ( \frac{4}{5} ) and ( \frac{5}{6} ) are equal, we can find a common denominator or cross-multiply. Cross-multiplying gives us ( 4 \times 6 = 24 ) and ( 5 \times 5 = 25 ). Since ( 24 \neq 25 ), the fractions ( \frac{4}{5} ) and ( \frac{5}{6} ) are not equal.
60% = 6/10 and 3/5
Some equivalent fractions of 3/5 are: 3/5 = 6/10 = 9/15 = 12/20 = 15/25.
6/1
Yes, they are equal fractions. 10/12 = 5/6 which, in decimal, is approximately 0.8333333333333333333 ... (the 3s repeat forever)
d. 2/5
To answer this question you must change the bottom numbers of the fractions so they are the same. 5/12 & 2/6 If you multiply 2/6 by 2 then the bottom number will be the same as the bottom number in the other fraction 5/12 4/12 Now you can see that the fractions are not equal 5/12 is bigger than 4/12, so the answer is no 5/12 is not equal to 2/6