Three of them.
yes...to know if it is equal use cross multiplication..if the answer is the same as the product of the denominetor to the numerator,it is equal
Five sixths.
When you want to add fractions that have different denominators, you have to convert them into fractions that do have the same denominators. So for example, how much is a half plus a third? Both of these can be converted into sixths, so one half equals three sixths, and one third equals two sixths. Three sixths plus two sixths equals five sixths. That's the answer. If you have three fractions with different denominators, the procedure is the same. Convert all three into fractions with the same denominators, then add them.
To solve this, set the denominators equal to one another so that we can just add the numerators. two fourths becomes 6/12 and two sixths becomes 4/12 When you add fractions with the same denominator, just add the numerator. The denominator stays the same This will leave you with 10/12, which can be simplified to equal 5/6
Three of them.
no
yes...to know if it is equal use cross multiplication..if the answer is the same as the product of the denominetor to the numerator,it is equal
0.08333 (recurring) or two twenty-fourths or three thirty-sixths
7/10
3/4 x 2/6 = 1/4
91/12
90 is your common denominator.
5 3/4 x 2/6 = 1 11/12
Five sixths.
It is two sixths
When you want to add fractions that have different denominators, you have to convert them into fractions that do have the same denominators. So for example, how much is a half plus a third? Both of these can be converted into sixths, so one half equals three sixths, and one third equals two sixths. Three sixths plus two sixths equals five sixths. That's the answer. If you have three fractions with different denominators, the procedure is the same. Convert all three into fractions with the same denominators, then add them.