There are an infinite number of pairs of fractions that do that.
Here are a few:
4/5 and 1/5
5/5 and 2/5
17/20 and 1/4
6/5 and 3/5
54/65 and 3/13
7/5 and 4/5
1,001/1,000 and 401/1,000
There are infinitely many fractions greater than two fifths; the most obvious answer would be three fifths. A half is also greater than two fifths.
Two and two fifths. Five minus two and three fifths = two and two fifths
minus three fifths
There are infinitely many possible answers. -2/3 and 9/10 is one possible answer.
Six and two fifths.
1 fifth and 2 fifths
There are infinitely many fractions greater than two fifths; the most obvious answer would be three fifths. A half is also greater than two fifths.
There are infinitely many fractions between the two. Seven tenths is one example.
To find two-thirds of three-fifths, you multiply the two fractions together: (2/3) × (3/5). This equals (2 × 3) / (3 × 5) = 6/15. Simplifying 6/15 gives you 2/5. Therefore, two-thirds of three-fifths is 2/5.
Two and two fifths. Five minus two and three fifths = two and two fifths
two fifths
5 is 25 fifths, 3 x 4 fifths is 12 fifths so difference is 13 fifths or 2.6 or two and three fifths.
anything higher than two fifths....? uh dur dur. noob.
The two fractions are exactly the same.
There are an infinite number of fractions between these two numbers
minus three fifths
When you see those fractions on paper and you read them, you say "two fifths" and "three fifths". When you hear that, you immediately realize that three of anything is always greater than two of the same thing.