the numerator of the F-ratio
33.6/17.6 multiply the numerator and the denominator by 10 = 336/176 divide the numerator and the denominator by 16 = 21/11or = 1 10/11
Yes, any time you have a numerator and a denominator that can be divided evenly by the same number it can be reduced. If you devide the numerator (560) and the denominator (1000) both by 8, you end up with 560/1000 = 70/125.
It is true; the z value has no unit of measurement. The formula for z is: (x-mu)/sigma and the units in the numerator and denominator cancel out.
Off the top of my head, a perfect F-ratio would be 1.00 which is never possible. All F-ratios will be greater than one so the numerator has to be greater than denominator.
you put the fraction in simplest form (the numerator and denominator have no common factors besides one) then you find what number your variable should be to make the denominator 0. this is excluded value b/c your denominator can never equal 0 the number you found is your excluded value ex. 4 ------ Your excluded value is 3 because 3(3-3)=0 x(x-3)
A fraction has a numerator and a denominator.
you switch the numerator with the denominator then multiply the numerator first then the denominator.
The same numerator as which numerator and the same denominator as which denominator?
numerator by numerator, denominator by denominator
"The numerator and denominator are known as the fraction bar.”
you multiply the numerator by the numerator and the denominator by the denominator.
Denominator = 5, numerator = 18
numerator is 8 denominator is 12
Denominator = numerator * 6.
2 as the numerator and 6 as the denominator in simplest form is 1 as the numerator and 3 as the denominator.
That would be the numerator. The numerator is above the denominator. The numerator divided by the denominator would be equal to the quotient. So, numerator/denominator = quotient
Denominator = Numerator/Value