Zero can be neither the numerator nor the denominator of a fraction.
zero.
any fraction
The answer depends on the part of the question that is missing.
No. The reason you can multiply a fraction by (x/x) to find an equivalent fraction is because for almost any x, (x/x) = 1. This is not the case for zero. Zero divided by zero does NOT equal 1, so multiplying the fraction by a value not equal to 1 will create a different fraction.
A fraction is close to zero if the numerator is small or if the denominator is large, or both.
There are no such fractions. No matter how close a fraction is to zero, there are still infinitely many that are closer.
The answer depends on "compared with what". The fraction 3/8 is close to zero compared to 7/8, but it is far from zero compared to 3/80.Fractions are infinitely dense and so, given anyfraction, there are infinitely many fractions between that fraction and zero. All of these will be closer to zero. And if you pick any one of these, there will be infinitely many between it and zero which will be closer still. And so it goes on.
Any fraction that has a zero as the numerator equals zero. Any fraction that does not have a zero in the numerator would be a nonzero fraction.
The fraction is zero. 0 divided by anything except zero is zero.
The rule is if the numerator is zero than the value of the fraction is zero.
Zero can be neither the numerator nor the denominator of a fraction.
"Zero point" is 0. It is an integer, not a fraction.
The world as we know it ceases to exist as the space-time continuum folds in on itself. Or Nothing happens. Division by zero is undefined. Any fraction with zero as a denominator is meaningless.
-9 over anything but zero is a fraction. Division by zero is undefined.
You can't change a fraction when the numerator is zero because no matter what the denominator is the fraction is still zero. A zero denominator is not allowed because you cannot divide by zero.
Zero