Change them into mixed numbers and add the integers and fractions together ensuring that the fractions have a common denominator.
No.
Yes you have to add with the same denominator. when ever you do fractions they have to have the same denominator no matter what. So thats a yes
-- Find a common denominator. (It will be a number of which all three denominators are factors. The best choice is their least common multiple.) -- Change the fractions to their equivalents with the common denominator. -- Then add their numerators to get the numerator of their sum.
if it has a denominator
Change them into mixed numbers and add the integers and fractions together ensuring that the fractions have a common denominator.
No.
Yes you have to add with the same denominator. when ever you do fractions they have to have the same denominator no matter what. So thats a yes
it stay the same when you subtract fractions and when you add fractions.
Multiply the denominator by the whole number, add the numerator and put that total over the denominator.
To add fractions it is necessary to find a common denominator. Add 5/8 + 1/10 Convert to a common denominator. 5/8 becomes 50/80. 1/10 becomes 8/80 Now it is possible to add the fractions. (50 + 8)/80 = 58/80 = 29/40
You first convert them to similar fractions, i.e., to fractions that have the same denominator.* Step one: find a common denominator.* Step two: convert both fractions to equivalent fractions that have that denominator.
You look for a common denominator; convert the fractions to equivalent fractions with the denominator you found; then you do the addition itself.
It stays the same. Only the numerators change.
You need a common denominator in order to add or subtract fractions.
-- Find a common denominator. (It will be a number of which all three denominators are factors. The best choice is their least common multiple.) -- Change the fractions to their equivalents with the common denominator. -- Then add their numerators to get the numerator of their sum.
Yes.