this is a tricky question but the relationship between the numerators of the product is that they both fractions - and for the next question is that in some fraction their is aways going to have the same denominator that never changes or DONT CHANGE AT ALL !
The relationship between the factors and the product is that they are both fractions.
You pretty much already answered your own question: the numerators of the factors are the factors of the numerator of the produce while the dividends of the factors are the factors of the dividend.
Numerators and denominators are just numbers; I hope you're not asking us to factor every number. There are many different methods. I prefer to find the prime factorization; that leads to all the other factors. Some people like to use a factor tree to help visualize the prime factorization.
In order to multiply fractions with variables, factor all numerators and denominators completely. Use the rules for multiplying and dividing fractions, cancel any common factors, and leave your final answer in factored form.
Oh, dude, unrelated denominators are like when you're trying to add fractions but the bottom numbers just don't want to be friends. It's like trying to mix oil and water - they just won't come together nicely. So, basically, when the denominators in fractions are different, they're just not on the same page mathematically.
The relationship between the factors and the product is that they are both fractions.
You pretty much already answered your own question: the numerators of the factors are the factors of the numerator of the produce while the dividends of the factors are the factors of the dividend.
Numerators and denominators are just numbers. List the factors of each and circle the numbers that appear on both lists. These are common factors.
Multiply all numerators to get numerator of the product. Multiply all denominators to get denominator of the product. This is true whether the factors have like or unlike denominators.
Numerators and denominators are just numbers; I hope you're not asking us to factor every number. There are many different methods. I prefer to find the prime factorization; that leads to all the other factors. Some people like to use a factor tree to help visualize the prime factorization.
No. To multiple fractions multiple the numerators together and multiply the denominators together and simplify (by dividing both numerator and denominator of the result by common factors until the only common factor is 1). The denominators only need to be the same when adding or subtracting fractions.
The simple way: multiply the numerators to get the numerator, multiply the denominators to get the denominator. To get the preferred answer cancel common factors in the new numerator and denominator. But this can be tricky.
-- Find a common denominator. (It will be a number of which all three denominators are factors. The best choice is their least common multiple.) -- Change the fractions to their equivalents with the common denominator. -- Then add their numerators to get the numerator of their sum.
its the same as working with integers. + and a + = + -and a - = + + and a - = - - and a + = - eg. 4/4 - - 3/4= 4/4 + 3/4= 1 3/4 1/2+ - 3/10 = 2/10= 1/5
In order to multiply fractions with variables, factor all numerators and denominators completely. Use the rules for multiplying and dividing fractions, cancel any common factors, and leave your final answer in factored form.
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Multiply them by each other.