It is a fraction in rational form.
Rational numbers are, by definition, expressible that way.
Yes, integers are rational numbers. Rational numbers are defined as the set of numbers that can be expressed as the ratio of two integers, where the denominator is not zero. Since integers can be expressed as the ratio of itself divided by 1, they are considered rational numbers.
The requirement for a number to be a rational number is that it can be expressed as a ratio of two integers, where the denominator does not equal zero.
A rational number is one that can be expressed as the ratio of two integers with the denominator not being zero. An irrational number is one that is not rational.
The ratio is not defined.
It is a rational fraction.
No, they are not!
It is a fraction in rational form.
yes and no because if it zero wouldn't it be a whole number or a improper fraction with a 1 under the numerator
Rational numbers are, by definition, expressible that way.
Yes, integers are rational numbers. Rational numbers are defined as the set of numbers that can be expressed as the ratio of two integers, where the denominator is not zero. Since integers can be expressed as the ratio of itself divided by 1, they are considered rational numbers.
The requirement for a number to be a rational number is that it can be expressed as a ratio of two integers, where the denominator does not equal zero.
A rational number is one that can be expressed as the ratio of two integers with the denominator not being zero. An irrational number is one that is not rational.
It is rational because it can be written as a ratio of two integers where the denominator is not zero. The number 98 can be written as 98/1.
A rational number can be expressed as a fraction or ratio of two integers. Zero is an integer. Therefore, zero is a rational number EXCEPT, that the denominator of a rational number cannot be zero. You can't divide by zero.
By demonstrating that it is equivalent to the ratio: 57/100. Any number that can be expressed as the ratio of two integers, the denominator not equal to zero, is rational.