1:2
1 to 4
According to eHow, your base area must support at least 1/3 of the table top area.
3% is 3:100 as a ratio
2 bananas. you also have 3 apples
-3 is the ratio of -3 to 1. It's also the ratio of 3 to -1, and the ratio of -12 to 4, etc. Any one of those facts proves that -3 is rational.
1 to 4
How one amount compares to another. Example: For every apple there is, there are 3 oranges aspect ratio: 1:3
There would be 168 apple trees in the orchard. Since the ratio of apple trees to pear trees is 4 to 3, and there are 126 pear trees, you can find the number of apple trees by multiplying 126 by 4/3.
3:8
Depends on the ratio of apples to foot squared.
According to eHow, your base area must support at least 1/3 of the table top area.
This involves several factors, size of table, intended use, design, there are "GENERAL" formula's out there, for certain designs. It comes down to intended use and its stability. Example: In bowl turning, the general formula is 2/3 bowl area, 1/3 base area, this is for beauty an balance to the eye, that said, I have also seen bowls that shatter that formula and are still beautiful an pleasing. My suggestion is go to a furniture store and find a table that you like that is similar, then take some measurements. Good-Luck
3% is 3:100 as a ratio
Ratios can be in any number of parts. For example, a fruit salad with apple, banana, mango and orange could have a ratio of apple : banana : mango : orange = 2 : 2 : 3 : 1.
2 bananas. you also have 3 apples
The ratio of all lengths is the same. The ratio of the circumferences = ratio of the radii = 2:3
Examples are:a ratio can also show a part compared to the whole lot. For example there are 5 pups, 2 are boys and 3 are girls, then the ratio of boys to girls 2/3, the ratio of boys to total is 2/5, the ratio of girls to total is 3/5.a ratio can also be used in drawings. For example to draw a horse with a scale 1/10 from its normal size. Another example is that the height to width ratio of the Indian Flag is 2:3 or 2/3Another examples are:1/2, 3/4, 78/89, ... etcx/(x+1), y/(y-2), ... etc.