The shaded parts
6 out of 6
whole number
Count how many parts there are in total (both shaded and unshaded) and write this as the denominator (bottom number) of the fraction. Count how many shaded parts there are and write this as the numerator (top number) of the fraction. You now have the fraction of the whole that is shaded.
How ever many extra shaded parts there are, well, say one whole is 6/6, and you have 9 pieces, instead of 6/6 with 3 left over, it's 9/6. In math you would call it an improper fraction.
The top of the fraction tells you how many bits of a whole one are represented, the bottom says how many equial parts the whole one is cut into. eg. 1/2 is .... 1 part of a apple which has been cut into 2 equial parts....
There are three parts to a fraction, there is the numerator (the top number), the denominator (the bottom number) and the vinculum (the line in the middle which means 'divide by'-
It is 0.
Zero
whole number
Count how many parts there are in total (both shaded and unshaded) and write this as the denominator (bottom number) of the fraction. Count how many shaded parts there are and write this as the numerator (top number) of the fraction. You now have the fraction of the whole that is shaded.
4 and a half
A whole
I suppose that would depend on being able to see the shaded parts of the figures.
numerator
It is 37/100.
The numerator in a Fraction is the top number. It states how many parts are in use or are being shaded in. The denominator states how many parts there are.
How ever many extra shaded parts there are, well, say one whole is 6/6, and you have 9 pieces, instead of 6/6 with 3 left over, it's 9/6. In math you would call it an improper fraction.
75% shaded; 25% unshaded