1/4 of a pizza.
3/5 is the greater fraction. 3/5 think of like a pizza. the closer to the whole pizza you get the bigger the part of the pizza you get.
The denominator tells you the whole thing of a pie. For example, if you want to eat 3/4 of a pizza, you will have 4 pizza's all together, and you eat 3 pizza. So you ate 3 pizza's out of 4 slices.
There cannot be a whole fraction. If it is a fraction it is not whole and if it is whole it is not a fraction.
Oh, dude, you want me to math? Okay, so 1.777777778 as a fraction is 1 and 7/9. It's like having one whole pizza and almost another whole slice, but not quite. So, yeah, that's your fraction, enjoy your pizza math lesson.
Figuring out how many pieces of pizza a family of four each gets from a pizza divided into 12 pieces.
Divide the denominator (bottom number) into the numerator (top number). A fraction is a division. Here's an example. 12/4 becomes 12 ÷ 4 = 3. To visualize this, think of a pizza. Say it's one of those personal pizzas and you slice the pizza into four equal slices (fourths, quarters, or 1/4 the original whole pizza). So 4/4 equals one pizza. Now if you take 12 of those (1/4 size) slices, you have 12/4 of a pizza, equal to 3 whole pizzas.
a fraction or a pizza(do you get it?u can reduce ,that means eat,the pizza.
Yes, because my little cousin can eat a whole pizza.
Multiply the fraction to the whole.
You can make any whole number into a fraction by putting it over 1.
Oh, dude, one thirteenth as a whole number is like 0.076923... but who's counting, right? It's like trying to divide a pizza into 13 equal slices; good luck with that! Just remember, math is hard, but pizza is easy.