It is simply a number: it can be rational, irrational - including transcendental, or even a complex number.
Any number that can be written as a fraction (with a non-zero denominator) is a rational number; in decimal format it will either terminate (possibly with no digits after the decimal point, ie an integer) or end in a repeating sequence of digits. Any number which cannot be written as a fraction (one integer over another) is an irrational number. If I understand your question correctly: A number written as a fraction with a denominator which does not equal zero can be any of a terminating decimal, a recurring decimal or an integer - they are all possible.
Any number that can be written in fraction form is a rational number. This includes integers , terminating decimals , and repeating decimals as well as fractions. An integer can be written as a fraction simply by giving it a denominator of one so any integer in a rational number.
Yes, -0.99 is a rational number because it can be written as a fraction, -99/100. A rational number is any number that can be expressed as a fraction with an integer numerator and a non-zero integer denominator.
A fraction cannot be an integer. An integer, such as 3, may be written as a fraction ie 9/3 or 15/5. But these are not really fractions, they are integers written in fractional form.A proper fraction cannot be an integer, but yuo can always write any integer as a fraction.For example, 7 = 7/1 or 35/5.
Any number that can be expressed as a fraction is a rational number as for example the integer 3 is 3/1 as an imprope fraction
Rational numbers are numbers that can be written as a fraction. Irrational Numbers cannot be expressed as a fraction. Any number that is a fraction is not an integer, but rational.
An integer is any number, positive or negative, that is written as a whole number. In other words, there is no fraction or decimals. Therefore, 14 is an integer.
Any number that can be written as a fraction (with a non-zero denominator) is a rational number; in decimal format it will either terminate (possibly with no digits after the decimal point, ie an integer) or end in a repeating sequence of digits. Any number which cannot be written as a fraction (one integer over another) is an irrational number. If I understand your question correctly: A number written as a fraction with a denominator which does not equal zero can be any of a terminating decimal, a recurring decimal or an integer - they are all possible.
Any number that can be written in fraction form is a rational number. This includes integers , terminating decimals , and repeating decimals as well as fractions. An integer can be written as a fraction simply by giving it a denominator of one so any integer in a rational number.
No, you cannot write any irrational number as a fraction.
100 IS an Integer. An integer is any positive or negative whole number (not a fraction number, and not zero).
Yes, -0.99 is a rational number because it can be written as a fraction, -99/100. A rational number is any number that can be expressed as a fraction with an integer numerator and a non-zero integer denominator.
44 is an integer and so there is no sensible way to write it as a mixed number. You could try 44 0/n where n is any positive integer. As an improper fraction, it is 44/1.
Any type of fraction is always a rational number.
109, like any integer, can be written as a fraction in simplest form by putting it over 1.
65 is an integer and so there is no sensible way of representing it as a mixed number. As a fraction, it may be written as 65/1. You cold also multiply both the numerator (top) and the denominator (bottom) of this rational fraction by any non-zero integer. You will have an equivalent fraction.
A fraction cannot be an integer. An integer, such as 3, may be written as a fraction ie 9/3 or 15/5. But these are not really fractions, they are integers written in fractional form.A proper fraction cannot be an integer, but yuo can always write any integer as a fraction.For example, 7 = 7/1 or 35/5.