It could be 2.5 which is 2 and 1/2
The square of 3 is 9, which does not lie between consecutive integers. Perhaps you mean the square root of 3, which lies between 1 and 2.
A numerator is the number in a fraction that lies abovethe divide line. The number that lies below the divide line is the denominator.For example, the fraction 3/4 has a numerator (3) and a denominator (4).the top number in a fractionThe numerator is the upper half of a fraction.
Here is the number line . ....-2, -7/4. -3/2 , -5/4, -1 , -3/4 , -1/2, -1/4, 0, 1/4, 1/2, 3/4, 1 , 5/4 , 3/2, 7/4, 2 ....
-5/3
Wrong!!!! '-2' lies to the left. Here is the number line about zero. -infinity.... -5,-4,-3,-2,-1,0,1,2,3,4,5.... +infinity.
It is 1.5 and as an improper fraction it is 3/2
It could be 2.5 which is 2 and 1/2
The square of 3 is 9, which does not lie between consecutive integers. Perhaps you mean the square root of 3, which lies between 1 and 2.
A numerator is the number in a fraction that lies abovethe divide line. The number that lies below the divide line is the denominator.For example, the fraction 3/4 has a numerator (3) and a denominator (4).the top number in a fractionThe numerator is the upper half of a fraction.
On the number line it is 3/1
Here is the number line . ....-2, -7/4. -3/2 , -5/4, -1 , -3/4 , -1/2, -1/4, 0, 1/4, 1/2, 3/4, 1 , 5/4 , 3/2, 7/4, 2 ....
-2
-5/3
3/4
There are infinitely many.
The fraction number line (its more sophisticated name is "Rational Number Line") looks like an ordinary straight line, but each submicroscopic point on the line represents a number which can be represented as a fraction of two integers. The number "zero" stands at the center of the line, and there are an infinite number of points in the line. No matter how close together two fractions are, there are an infinite number of fractions between them. A number line is a strictly theoretical concept. It really isn't possible to draw more than an extremely limited example of a number line, since there is no limit to the number of points on a number line. Here's a very primitive fraction number line, showing only halves: -7/2 ... -3 ... -5/2 ... -2 ... -3/2 ... -1 ... -1/2 ... 0 ... 1/2 ... 1 ... 3/2 ... 2 ... 5/2 ... 3 ... 7/2 And an only slightly more intricate line showing only sevenths: -6/7 ... -5/7 ... -4/7 ... -3/7 ... -2/7 ... -1/7 ... 0 ... 1/7 ... 2/7 ... 3/7 ... 4/7 ... 5/7 ... 6/7