Multiply both the numerator (top) and the denominator (bottom) of the fraction by any non-zero integer or divide both by any common factor. You will have an equivalent fraction. Repeat with two other multipliers.
Equivalent fractions do.
numbers that are equal or represent the same value
It is: 3 and 11/50 as a mixed number or 161/50 as an improper fraction both in their simplified forms
Decimal, percent, fraction, and words
No. Simplest forms are equivalent but equivalent forms need not be simplest.
Equivalent fractions do.
To write rational numbers in equivalent forms, you can multiply or divide both the numerator and the denominator by the same non-zero integer. For example, the rational number ( \frac{2}{3} ) can be expressed as ( \frac{4}{6} ) by multiplying both the numerator and denominator by 2. Similarly, dividing both by the same integer will also yield an equivalent form, such as ( \frac{2}{3} ) becoming ( \frac{1}{1.5} ) by dividing both by 2.
Any percentage is simply a rational number, with the denominator of 100. So multiply them all by 100 and order the resulting rational numbers.
Numbers can be ordinal, cardinal or imaginary. They could also be fractional, decimal, rational or irrational.
100+40+9
numbers that are equal or represent the same value
It is: 3 and 11/50 as a mixed number or 161/50 as an improper fraction both in their simplified forms
Decimal, percent, fraction, and words
No. Simplest forms are equivalent but equivalent forms need not be simplest.
To find out if two fractions are equivalent, either reduce them both to their simplest forms (which will be the same number if they're equivalent) or convert them to decimals (which will be the same number if they're equivalent). To make an equivalent fraction of a given fraction, multiply the numerator and the denominator of the given fraction by the same counting number.
All rational numbers CAN be expressed as a ratio of two integers. They may appear, before simplification, to be expressed in other forms. For example, the rational number 1 can be written as the ratio sin(45)/cos(45) even though neither numerator nor denominator is an integer.
Forms