Oh, dude, the reciprocal of 2 is 1/2. It's like flipping a fraction upside down, you know? So, if you ever need to divide something by 2, just multiply it by 1/2 instead. Easy peasy lemon squeezy.
Well honey, the reciprocal of a number is just 1 divided by that number. So, the reciprocal of 2 is 1/2, and the reciprocal of 4 is 1/4. Simple math, darling.
The reciprocal of 2/15 is 15/2.
the reciprocal of 1 over 2, is 2. reciprocal just means you flip the numbers over, in this case it leaves 2 over 1 which is the same as 2 divided by 1 which is 2. for example the reciprocal of 10 is 1 over 10 and the reciprocal over 1 over 7 is 7.
A reciprocal is 1 divided by a number. So, the reciprocal of x is 1/x. For example: The reciprocal of 2 is 1/2 is 0.5 The reciprocal of 9 is 1/9 is 0.111111111111 The reciprocal of 0.5 is 1/0.5 is 2. To divide one by a number is called 'taking the reciprocal.' If you have a fraction, taking the reciprocal is fairly easy: simply 'flip' it. I.e., put the numerator in the denominator, and the denominator in the numerator. For example: The reciprocal of 2/3 is 3/2 The reciprocal of 7/8 is 8/7 The reciprocal of 1/4 is 4 (/1). The technical mathematical definition of the reciprocal of x is: "The number which, when multiplied by x, gives one."
Ah, what a happy little math question we have here! To find the reciprocal of a number, you simply flip it upside down. So, the reciprocal of 2 is 1/2 and the reciprocal of 7 is 1/7. Remember, there are no mistakes in math, just happy little accidents!
1 is the reciprocal of 1.
The reciprocal is simply 1/x Reciprocal of 7 = 1/7. Reciprocal of 2 is 1/2 or 0.5.
1/2. Reciprocal is the term inverted so 2 over 1 becomes 1 over 2
A 'flipped' fraction is correctly named as a Reciprocal. e.g. 2 . The reciprocal is 1/2 The reciprocal of 1/2 is 2.
2:1 is reciprocal of 1:2
Well honey, the reciprocal of a number is just 1 divided by that number. So, the reciprocal of 2 is 1/2, and the reciprocal of 4 is 1/4. Simple math, darling.
The reciprocal of any integer n is equal to 1/n. In this instance, the reciprocal of 2 is equal to 1/2 or one half.
The reciprocal of -2/3 is -3/2. A reciprocal simply flips the numerator and the denominator and there it is.
no "to reciprocal" is meaningless. If you mean can you take a reciprocal of a fraction, then the reciprocal of 5/97, for example, is 97/5 in just the same way that the reciprocal of 2 (think of 2/1) is 1/2.
Ah, the reciprocal of 2 over 5 is a beautiful thing to explore. To find the reciprocal, you simply flip the fraction upside down. So, the reciprocal of 2 over 5 is 5 over 2. It's like a little dance between numbers, creating harmony on the canvas of mathematics.
The reciprocal of 2/15 is 15/2.
If you mean 2/3 then the reciprocal is 3/2