In division, the number being divided is the dividend, the number by which it is divided is the divisor, and the result of division is called the quotient.In fractions, the numerator is the dividend and the denominator the divisor.
No. For example, 5 divided by 0.5 is equal to 10. In general, assuming you work with positive numbers only, if you divide by a number GREATER than one, the result will be less than the original number; if you divide by a number LESS than one, the result will be larger than the original number.
The result of one number multiplied by another number would be the product.It depends what number you are using as the another. If its one its 1*1=1, or two 1*2=2, it can go on as long it is 1*____ it would equal what ____ is.
It is called the sum
When one number is subtracted from another number, the result is known as the difference.
In division, the number being divided is the dividend, the number by which it is divided is the divisor, and the result of division is called the quotient.In fractions, the numerator is the dividend and the denominator the divisor.
The result is called the quotient Don't thank me thank my math teacher;)
Divide the number by 100. The result is 1% of the number.
One way:-- Subtract the discount percent number from 100 .-- Multiply the result by the dollar amount.-- Divide the result by 100 .-- The result is the discounted amount.===============================Another way:-- Multiply the dollar amount by the discount percent number.-- Divide the result by 100 .-- Subtract the result from the original dollar amount.-- The result is the discounted amount.
The word for the answer after dividing one number by another is the quotient.
There are an infinite number of answers but the most obvious is: -0.467/-1 = 0.467 If you divide a negative number by another negative number then the result will be positive.
If you multiply or divide the numbers, the answer will be negative.
The result is one hundredth of the number before.
When you want to subtract one number from another.
Divide the smaller number into the bigger one. If the result is an integer, the first number is a factor of the second one.
When you divide one number by another which is not a factor.
Whenever you divide one number by another number that is not its factor. Whenever you add a fraction to, or subtract one from, a whole number. Whenever you take a root of a number that is not a "perfect" power. and many, many other situations.