There are infinitely many of them.
Take any positive integer k and let 0 then (4k + j)/k is such a fraction, because, (4k + j)/k = 4k/k + j/k (by the distributive property) = 4 + j/k and 0 The choice of k is arbitrary meaning there are infinitely many possible answers. Take any positive integer k and let 0 then (4k + j)/k is such a fraction, because, (4k + j)/k = 4k/k + j/k (by the distributive property) = 4 + j/k and 0 The choice of k is arbitrary meaning there are infinitely many possible answers. Take any positive integer k and let 0 then (4k + j)/k is such a fraction, because, (4k + j)/k = 4k/k + j/k (by the distributive property) = 4 + j/k and 0 The choice of k is arbitrary meaning there are infinitely many possible answers. Take any positive integer k and let 0 then (4k + j)/k is such a fraction, because, (4k + j)/k = 4k/k + j/k (by the distributive property) = 4 + j/k and 0 The choice of k is arbitrary meaning there are infinitely many possible answers.
There are infinitely many of them.
There are infinitely many of them.
There are infinitely many of them.
Chat with our AI personalities
There are infinitely many of them.
Take any positive integer k and let 0 then (4k + j)/k is such a fraction, because, (4k + j)/k = 4k/k + j/k (by the distributive property) = 4 + j/k and 0 The choice of k is arbitrary meaning there are infinitely many possible answers.
here is an example if you want to convert an improper fraction 5 and 3\4 you would multiply the denominator 4 and the whole number 5 and then you add 3 the nominator so the answer would be 23 over 4
An improper fraction is when the numerator is a greater sum then the denominator. Example- 10/5. To change that into a proper fraction you divide the numerator by the denominator. Example - 2 1/5
You have a fraction say 33/5, which is an improper fraction you take the 5 into the 33. that is divide the doniminator(5), into the numerator (33), and that will give you 6 3/5.
you cant turn improper fractions into fractions but you can turn fractions into mixed numbers. to do this you see how many times the denominator goes into the numerator. for example: if your improper fraction is 7/5, 5 goes into 7 one time but there is two left over. you just put that two on top of your denominator and it turns out 1 and 2/5.
Improper fractions cannot become proper fractions.