Not very much!
A proper fraction is a fraction whose numerator is less than the denominator.
Yes, the word 'whose' is the possessive form of the interrogative/relative pronoun "who." For example: "Whose book is that?" or "Timmy, whose pants had fallen down, was embarrassed."
The woman is a widow.
a proper fraction whose denominator is a power of 10
You cannot. A proper fraction is one whose absolute value is less than 1 while an improper fraction is one whose absolute value is at least one.
It is a proper fraction and can be simplified to 25/36 whose square root is 5/6
Proper fractions have a numerator whose face value is less than the face value of the denominator. 4/5 is a proper fraction, whereas 5/4 is not.
2.47 is a fraction whose absolute value is greater than 1. It is, therefore, impossible to turn it into a proper fraction.
Yes, in the sense that it is an organization whose function is worshiping Christ.
What kind of binary is it?!
No, Franz is a proper noun (Frank or Francis are western versions of it). The names of people and places are generally proper nouns. A proper adjective is a word whose root is a proper noun-- like "Italy" is a proper noun, and Italian is a proper adjective: that new Italian restaurant is wonderful.
In parallel around the component whose voltage you wish to measure.