Yes, you can.
In division, the quotient means the answer, the sum, difference, or product.
The two numerators are the same. The first denominator is smaller so the quotient is larger.
The two numerators are the same. The first denominator is smaller so the quotient is larger. As a result the first quotient is greater.
They are rational fractions.
The quotient is 1/3, that is one fourth. You divide fractions by dividing its numerator (3 divided by 3=1), if it is possible or you multiply its denominator (4x3=12, so 3/12 =1/4).
Suppose the two fractions are b/f and c/d.Then (b/d)/(c/d) = (b/d)*(d/c) = (b*d)/(c*d) = b/d.
In division, the quotient means the answer, the sum, difference, or product.
The two numerators are the same. The first denominator is smaller so the quotient is larger.
The two numerators are the same. The first denominator is smaller so the quotient is larger. As a result the first quotient is greater.
They are rational fractions.
-- Divide the numerator by the denominator.-- Multiply the quotient by 100 .
The quotient is 1/3, that is one fourth. You divide fractions by dividing its numerator (3 divided by 3=1), if it is possible or you multiply its denominator (4x3=12, so 3/12 =1/4).
1) If the numerator and denominator are equal 2) If dividing the numerator by the denominator yields a quotient of 1 with no remainder
376.0/93 The numerical values of both the numerators are the same. In the second case the denominator is larger and so the quotient will be smaller.
Yes. The line in a fraction can be read as "divided by." When you convert a fraction to a decimal, the decimal is the quotient of the numerator and the denominator. 3/8 = 3 divided by 8 = 0.375
You subtract the exponent of the denominator from that of the numerator.
The quotient is the result when you divide a numerator of a fraction by the denominator