There are 12 thirds in four wholes. To find this, you multiply the number of wholes by the number of parts in each whole (4 wholes x 3 parts = 12 thirds). This is because each whole can be divided into three equal parts to make thirds.
12/10 does not equal a whole number.
0.4167
Imagine a round pie. Now slice the pie into twelve slices, as there are twelve hungry people wanting a slice of pie. Each slice is a twelfth of the whole pie.
47/12 is not a whole number. It is just under 4 (48/12 = 4), and is equal to 3 and 11/12.
12
There are 12 thirds in four wholes. To find this, you multiply the number of wholes by the number of parts in each whole (4 wholes x 3 parts = 12 thirds). This is because each whole can be divided into three equal parts to make thirds.
25
Yes, 0 over 12 is a fraction. A fraction is a way to represent a part of a whole, where the numerator (in this case, 0) represents the part being considered, and the denominator (in this case, 12) represents the total number of equal parts in the whole. In this case, 0 over 12 simplifies to 0, indicating that there are no parts of the whole being considered.
12/10 does not equal a whole number.
0.4167
Imagine a round pie. Now slice the pie into twelve slices, as there are twelve hungry people wanting a slice of pie. Each slice is a twelfth of the whole pie.
47/12 is not a whole number. It is just under 4 (48/12 = 4), and is equal to 3 and 11/12.
12 whole racks of ribs
EQUAL I THINK 14 of a 12 because it is a whole if you had to simplify it
wow do not know
12 if whole is 100, but can be any number depending on value of whole