0.8*15 = 12 so the fraction is 12/15. Simple!
If you mean 1/15 then 15 is the denominator and 1 is the numerator
YES a fraction can be a denominator.
Multiply the numerator (top) and the denominator (bottom) of the fraction by any non-zero number. You will have an equivalent fraction.
you can leave it as an improper fraction OR you can divide the denominator INTO the numerator and end up with a mixed number EXAMPLE: 26/15 = 1 11/15
2.5
If you mean 1/15 then 15 is the denominator and 1 is the numerator
15 is an integer, not a fraction. If you must, you can express it as a fraction as 15/1.Multiply the numerator (top) and the denominator (bottom) of this fraction by any non-zero integer. You will have an equivalent fraction.15 is an integer, not a fraction. If you must, you can express it as a fraction as 15/1.Multiply the numerator (top) and the denominator (bottom) of this fraction by any non-zero integer. You will have an equivalent fraction.15 is an integer, not a fraction. If you must, you can express it as a fraction as 15/1.Multiply the numerator (top) and the denominator (bottom) of this fraction by any non-zero integer. You will have an equivalent fraction.15 is an integer, not a fraction. If you must, you can express it as a fraction as 15/1.Multiply the numerator (top) and the denominator (bottom) of this fraction by any non-zero integer. You will have an equivalent fraction.
3 as an improper fraction with a denominator of 5 = 15/5
6/15
15/32 numerator = 15, denominator = 32
5/15 = 1/3
6/10 is equal to 9/15, and its denominator is 4 greater than its numerator.
Yes and it is simply 15/1 as an improper fraction because its numerator is greater than its denominator
YES a fraction can be a denominator.
It is 3.
15 __ 20
6/15