Yes and no. In order to find the ratio between the number of Oranges to bathtubs in a certain apartment block, you need to be able to count the oranges and the bathtubs, which means that you need a group of things (oranges or bathtubs) which are the same as all the other members of the group but which are not the same as the members of the other group.
A ratio between things that are absolutely unique is always 1:1. The ratio between planets called earth (there's only one) and the German Chancellors called Adolf Hitler (only one of these as well) is of course 1:1.
No. It is necessary to multiply.
a compound
Same things as in sims 2.
compound
compound
That depends what you mean by "things". In general though, you would have the same kinds of things in terms of possessions that people have in both countries.
shopping cards food toys
we canadians do all kinds of things in china, we bake and send orgammy stuff!
A chemical formula gives the number ratio of the different kinds of atoms present in the compound. This means that the ratios are the same if you count in individual atoms, dozens of atoms, or molecules of atoms.
For an ideal transformer, the voltage ratio is the same as its turns ratio.
A necessary condition for the usefulness of a ratio of financial numbers is that the components of the ratio must be relevant and comparable in context. This means that the financial figures should come from the same period and be derived from consistent accounting practices. Additionally, the ratio should be meaningful for the specific analysis or decision-making purpose, allowing for effective comparison across time periods, companies, or industry benchmarks.
direct square variation is a function that relates the same or equal constant ratio. It is a function that is typically used in different kinds of algebra.