You multiply the fractions together and with your answer u simplify and then make that into a percent remember perect is over 100 so take your denominator divide that from 100 and then what you end up with is your degree.
A full rotation is equivalent to 360 degrees. To find the fraction of a full rotation that 300 degrees represents, you would divide 300 by 360. This simplifies to 5/6. Therefore, 300 degrees is 5/6 of a full rotation.
It is: 140/360 = 7/18 degrees in its lowest terms
A half.
3/4
There are 360 degrees in a circle so 45 degrees is 1/8th of a circle.
1/3 = 120 degrees.
The answer depends on the number whose fraction you are trying to find.
To find the fraction of 360 degrees that 240 degrees represents, you would divide 240 by 360. This simplifies to 2/3, meaning that 240 degrees is 2/3 of 360 degrees. This can also be expressed as a percentage, which would be 66.67%.
To determine the fraction of a circle that 210 degrees represents, we first need to know that a full circle is 360 degrees. Therefore, to find the fraction of the circle represented by 210 degrees, we divide 210 by 360, which equals 0.5833. This can be simplified to 7/12, so 210 degrees represents 7/12 of a circle.
There are 360 degrees around a circle and if an arc covers 45 degrees of the circle then the fraction is 45/360 or 1/8 in its simplest form
To express 140 degrees as a fraction, we need to consider that a full circle is 360 degrees. Therefore, 140 degrees is a fraction of the full circle. To convert this into a fraction, we can write it as 140/360. This fraction can be simplified by dividing both the numerator and denominator by their greatest common factor, which in this case is 20. Thus, 140 degrees as a fraction is 7/18.
135 is an integer, not a fraction. So the answer is 135 degrees.
There can be no answer. 80 degrees can be expressed as a fraction only in the context of another quantity.
A full rotation is equivalent to 360 degrees. To find the fraction of a full rotation that 300 degrees represents, you would divide 300 by 360. This simplifies to 5/6. Therefore, 300 degrees is 5/6 of a full rotation.
One-sixth
36
Oh, dude, the revolution of a fraction of 72 degrees is 1/5. Yeah, it's like if you spin a circle 360 degrees, that's a full revolution, right? So, if you only spin it 72 degrees, that's like a fifth of a revolution. Math can be fun, right?