No, it doesn't help you at all. It just gets in the way. Think of a whole giant candy bar cut in half, and one of the halves cut in three equal parts.
The simplest example is to take your birthday cake and cut it so that each of your ten guests have an equal slice. Each slice is a tenth of the whole cake. Therefore, a tenth is a fraction (or part) of a whole.
Divide
False. "If" and "then" are NOT included in the hypothesis and conclusion... (:
Able to be cut in half and have equal parts.
Equal parts.
It means five of the equal parts of a whole thing, after the whole thing has been cut up into 1,000 equal parts. To read it out loud, you say "five thousandths".
One third each.
No, it doesn't help you at all. It just gets in the way. Think of a whole giant candy bar cut in half, and one of the halves cut in three equal parts.
2k
The simplest example is to take your birthday cake and cut it so that each of your ten guests have an equal slice. Each slice is a tenth of the whole cake. Therefore, a tenth is a fraction (or part) of a whole.
The top of the fraction tells you how many bits of a whole one are represented, the bottom says how many equial parts the whole one is cut into. eg. 1/2 is .... 1 part of a apple which has been cut into 2 equial parts....
It is A to bisect is to cut into two equal parts
to cut int 2 parts
Divide
False. "If" and "then" are NOT included in the hypothesis and conclusion... (:
You cut it in half and then cut it in half again. There you go, 4 parts! :3