# A numerical fraction in which the numerator is less than the denominator. # A polynomial fraction in which the numerator is of a lower degree than the denominator.
YES a fraction can be a denominator.
It is a proper fraction and if the numerator > denominator than it is an improper fraction.
When the numerators are the same, the fraction with the higher denominator is less than the fraction with the lower denominator. The denominator indicates the size of the "parts" being shown as a fraction, and the higher the denominator, the smaller those parts are!
.6 = 6/10 , by definition. = 3/5 (reduced -- divide numerator and denominator by 2.
It is a fraction in which the numerator or the denominator is 1.
# A numerical fraction in which the numerator is less than the denominator. # A polynomial fraction in which the numerator is of a lower degree than the denominator.
A percent, by definition is a fraction with an implied denominator of 100.
A dissimilar fraction is a fraction where the denominator is not the same as the others .
The definition is a different denominator in a fraction
A complex fraction is one in which the numerator, denominator, or both contain a fraction.
If the GCF of the numerator and denominator is 1, the fraction is in its simplest form.
Where the numerator and denominator have no further common factors
When the top number (the numerator) of a fraction is greater than the bottom number (the denominator) then this is said to be an improper fraction. The formal definition is that an improper fraction occurs when the absolute value of the numerator is greater than or equal to the absolute value of the denominator.
A proper fraction is one in which the absolute value of the numerator is less than that of the denominator.
taking two fractions. and cross multiply. all fraction has a numerator (top number) and a denominator (bottom number). multiply the numerator to the other fraction's denominator and the denominator to the other fraction's numerator to get the product.
a number with only a numerator over a larger denominator.