Yes. If you had 3.5 sevenths, that is exactly a half.
I am pretty sure its the numerator, but it could be the denominator.
The only thing that you can be certain of is that the answer will be a number. It could be irrational or rational, it could be a proper fraction, integer or improper (mixed) fraction.
A circle can have a unit of length which could be either a measure of its diameter or radius, or of its circumference. Or the circle could have the unit of area.
It is 70/1 as an improper fraction or 'top heavy' fraction
You could write a fraction as a proper, improper or mixed fraction.
The fraction 1 1/2 is equal to 2.10. If you take a fraction circle pieces and match them up you could see they are the same. - soldier ARIANA MILLER
it could be a he you know.
You could use a knife, scissors, or a chainsaw, depending what material your circle is made from.
4/7ths plus 4/7ths equals 8/7ths. This would be 1 and 1/7th
It's the denominator I think, but it could be the numerator
I am pretty sure its the numerator, but it could be the denominator.
It depends on what is meant by "full turn"? Assuming a turn of 90o to the right, then 90o could be classed as 1/4 of a circle of 360o . If the turn was clockwise through to 270o then the fraction could be 3/4.
A circle has no corners. In general "Side" is a term that is reserved for polygons; a polygon is a simple closed piecewise-linear curve in the plane with finitely many linear pieces and the number of sides of a polygon is the number of linear pieces. For a circle - as far as how many side it has - the answer depends on the definition of the word "side." There are valid arguments (depending of how "side" is defined) for 0, 1, 2, and ∞. Since it has no flat edges you could argue for 0. You could think of it as having 1 continuously curved side A circle only has "inside", an "outside" and the set of points that define the circle so you could argue for 2. You can draw infinitely many tangents to it - so you could argue ∞
It is an integer, not a fraction, but if you must, you could write it as 147000/1.It is an integer, not a fraction, but if you must, you could write it as 147000/1.It is an integer, not a fraction, but if you must, you could write it as 147000/1.It is an integer, not a fraction, but if you must, you could write it as 147000/1.
You could multiply the fraction by -1.
The only thing that you can be certain of is that the answer will be a number. It could be irrational or rational, it could be a proper fraction, integer or improper (mixed) fraction.
A circle can have a unit of length which could be either a measure of its diameter or radius, or of its circumference. Or the circle could have the unit of area.