2
its 1 over 3 its 1 over 3
You multiply the denominator by the whole number, then add the numerator of the original fraction to get the numerator of your new fraction. The denominator stays the same as the original. Then you simplify into lowest terms.
the reciprocal of the original fraction
Suppose you have a fraction such as 3/7.To find an equivalent fraction, think of any non-zero integer. How about 6?Multiply the top and the bottom of your original fraction by this number to get an equivalent fraction. So3/7 = (3*6)/(7*6) = 18/42Suppose you have a fraction such as 3/7.To find an equivalent fraction, think of any non-zero integer. How about 6?Multiply the top and the bottom of your original fraction by this number to get an equivalent fraction. So3/7 = (3*6)/(7*6) = 18/42Suppose you have a fraction such as 3/7.To find an equivalent fraction, think of any non-zero integer. How about 6?Multiply the top and the bottom of your original fraction by this number to get an equivalent fraction. So3/7 = (3*6)/(7*6) = 18/42Suppose you have a fraction such as 3/7.To find an equivalent fraction, think of any non-zero integer. How about 6?Multiply the top and the bottom of your original fraction by this number to get an equivalent fraction. So3/7 = (3*6)/(7*6) = 18/42
You just write the fraction and simplified if needed. Original answer:95/100 Simplified answer:19/20
1/32
only if it is moved parallel to its original direction
The original fraction is -145/(-282) or it could be 850/35700 or one of infinitely many possibilities.
The quotient is larger than the original fraction.
748903
Multiplying a function by -1 will make it a reflection of the original function across the x axis.
The fraction is the remainder divided by the original divisor.
You don't. But you do. When converting a mixed number into an improper fraction. A mixed fraction contains a whole number and a proper fraction, for example 23⁄4. To convert this to an 'improper' fraction, the whole number is multiplied by the denominator and added to the numerator to obtain the new numerator. See. but WHY? The denominator remains unchanged (unless, of course, you wish to simplify the fraction). This is unrelated! At no point did you actually provide an answer to this question.Continuing with the original example, for 23⁄4, (2 · 4 + 3) = 11, so the new fraction is 11⁄4.Ps. Anything in italics has been improved by another person.
its 1 over 3 its 1 over 3
It is the denominator of the original fraction. If the fraction has been simplified you have no way to get back to the total.
You multiply the denominator by the whole number, then add the numerator of the original fraction to get the numerator of your new fraction. The denominator stays the same as the original. Then you simplify into lowest terms.
the reciprocal of the original fraction