A fraction strip is simply a paper used to find fractions of a whole.
You can fold a thirds strip in half and then in half again and you get twelfths.
1/10 1/5
You can make the 8 12 16 strip
If your teacher gave you an eighths strip like the one you made in Problem 1.2, which of the fraction strips you folded for Problem 1.2 would have more than one mark that lines up with the marks on the eighths strip?
With a fraction strip folded into tenths, you can measure lengths represented by the fractions 1/10, 2/10 (which simplifies to 1/5), 3/10, 4/10 (or 2/5), 5/10 (which is 1/2), 6/10 (or 3/5), 7/10, 8/10 (or 4/5), and 9/10. Each segment represents a part of the whole, allowing you to measure any fraction that can be expressed with a denominator of 10.
The fraction strips that you can make if you start with a thirds strip is a fraction strip with, 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9, or any other number with using a third fraction just drawing it in a fraction strip.
You can fold a thirds strip in half and then in half again and you get twelfths.
1/10 1/5
its equal not the answer
hope this anwser help 1/10 and 1/5
You can make eights or sixteenth
You can make the 8 12 16 strip
A quarter.
They are all factors of 12
Well honey, if you've got a fraction strip folded into twelfths, you can measure lengths in twelfths! Each section represents one twelfth of the whole strip, so you can measure anything from one twelfth all the way up to twelve twelfths (which is just a fancy way of saying the whole darn strip). So, get measuring and don't let those twelfths intimidate you!
If your teacher gave you an eighths strip like the one you made in Problem 1.2, which of the fraction strips you folded for Problem 1.2 would have more than one mark that lines up with the marks on the eighths strip?
With a fraction strip folded into tenths, you can measure lengths represented by the fractions 1/10, 2/10 (which simplifies to 1/5), 3/10, 4/10 (or 2/5), 5/10 (which is 1/2), 6/10 (or 3/5), 7/10, 8/10 (or 4/5), and 9/10. Each segment represents a part of the whole, allowing you to measure any fraction that can be expressed with a denominator of 10.