If it repeats forever and never terminates, then it represents the ratio of 3 to 11.
Any number that either terminates or repeats the same pattern over and over is rational - and vice versa: any rational number either terminates, or repeats.
An irrational number.
Irrational number.
If the denominator is 2 or 5 it terminates. Otherwise it repeats.
No. A rational number is a number that either terminates or repeats. An irrational number neither terminates nor repeats. Therefore, it cannot be both.
If it repeats forever and never terminates, then it represents the ratio of 3 to 11.
Any number that either terminates or repeats the same pattern over and over is rational - and vice versa: any rational number either terminates, or repeats.
An irrational number.
Irrational number.
If the denominator is 2 or 5 it terminates. Otherwise it repeats.
The circumference of any circle divided by the diameter is pi. Pi is approximately 3.14159....It is an irrational number, never terminates or repeats.
A rational number always repeats or terminates which can be thought of as repeating zeroes.
rational
No because any number that can be expressed as a fraction is a rational number and in this case the fraction is 1/3When trying to represent an irrational number as a decimal there are two conditions:the part of after the decimal never terminates (which is met by the described number)the decimal part never repeats (which is NOT met by the described number)
Such as pi? That would be an irrational number.
Any decimal that terminates or repeats is a rational number; as 0.113113113.... repeats the digits "113" it is a rational number. 0.113113113... = 113/999 (in fraction form).