fractions
It could be called an equivalence relationship.
Two fractions that are the same are called equivalent fractions. Example: 4/5 and 8/10. When two fractions are set equal to each other in an equation, that equation is called a proportion: 4/5 = x/10
the difference between two equal fractions is zero.
Two fractions set equal to each other form a proportion.
improper fractions
In actual problems, we convert two (or more) fractions so that they have equal denominators.
They are called equivalent fractions.
fractions
It could be called an equivalence relationship.
If the denominators (bottom numbers) are not equal, making equivalent fractions of them so that the denominators are equal. With the denominators equal if the numerators (top numbers) are equal, then the fractions are equal.
Fractions of the same value but with different values are called equivalent fractions. For example, 3/4 (three quarters) and 6/8 (six eighths) are both equal to 0.75, and are therefore equivalent fractions. Hope this helps >.<
Two fractions that are the same are called equivalent fractions. Example: 4/5 and 8/10. When two fractions are set equal to each other in an equation, that equation is called a proportion: 4/5 = x/10
Fractions that are greater than one are known as improper or 'top-heavy' fractions as the numerator is greater than the denominator.
Oh, dude, non-equivalent fractions are basically fractions that don't represent the same amount, like comparing a slice of pizza to a whole pizza - totally not the same, right? It's like trying to say a mini cupcake is the same as a giant cake - nah, not gonna fly. So yeah, non-equivalent fractions are just fractions that are like apples and oranges, you know?
Fractions will always equal 1 when their numerator is the same as their denominator
the difference between two equal fractions is zero.