| Jennings Cropper Wise - Artillery, Field and mountain - 1912 - 352 pages
...ten-thousandths.'' From this it is seen that the denominator of the decimal fraction corresponding to any decimal is 1 with as many ciphers annexed as there are decimal places in the decimal; and that any decimal is read by reading the number after the decimal point as a numerator,... | |
| Albert Irvin Frye - Civil engineering - 1913 - 1694 pages
...the numerator of the fraction, use the significant figures of the decimal, the denominator Ымпк 1 with as many ciphers annexed as there are decimal places in the decimal; reduce to lowest terms. (Л i |" i i 1 * 1 "3 J « в Л »3 a 'л a 1 ' • 1 6. E £ s I... | |
| William Henry Dooley - Mathematics - 1915 - 364 pages
...fraction. Write the numerator of the decimal omitting the point for the numerator of the fraction. For the denominator write 1 with as many ciphers annexed as there are decimal places in the decimal. Tl'en reduce to lowest terms. EXAMPLE. — Reduce .25 and .125 to common fractions. 1 Write... | |
| William Henry Dooley - Arithmetic - 1917 - 394 pages
...fraction. Write the numerator of the decimal omitting the point for the numerator of the fraction. For the denominator write 1 with as many ciphers annexed as there are decimal places in the decimal. Then reduce to lowest terms. EXAMPLE. — Reduce .25 and .125 to common fractions. 1 Write... | |
| Ludlum Steel Company - Tool-steel - 1918 - 174 pages
...A DECIMAL INTO A COMMON FRACTION Set down the decimal as a numerator, and place as the denominator 1 with as many ciphers annexed as there are decimal places in the numerator; erase the decimal point in the numerator and reduce the fraction thus formed to its lowest... | |
| John Rome Battle - Lubrication and lubricants - 1920 - 1280 pages
...TO COMMON FRACTIONS. Omit the decimal points and supply the proper denominator. The denominator is (1) with as many ciphers annexed as there are decimal places in the numerator. Example: Reduce .125 to a common fraction: 125 _ 25 _ 1 1000~200~8 a ' TO REDUCE COMMON... | |
| United States. Army. Quartermaster Corps - 1930 - 1216 pages
...ten-thousandths." From this it is seen that the denominator of the decimal fraction corresponding to any decimal is 1 with as many ciphers annexed as there are decimal places in the decimal, and that any decimal is read by reading the number after the decimal point as a numerator... | |
| United States. Army. Quartermaster Corps - 1930 - 1238 pages
...ten-thousandths." From this it is seen that the denominator of the decimal fraction corresponding to any decimal is 1 with as many ciphers annexed as there are decimal places in the decimal, and that any decimal is read by reading the number after the decimal point as a numerator... | |
| Joseph Ray - Arithmetic - 1857 - 340 pages
...ciphers annexed ; Thus, .002 = T>fo5 ; and so on : hence, The denominator of a Decimal Fraction is 1, with as many ciphers annexed as there are decimal places in the numerator. ART. 170. TABLE OP DECIMAL PLACES OR ORDERS. REM.— The orders called ten-thousandths,... | |
| Joseph Ray - Arithmetic - 1866 - 210 pages
...5.355, ,4ns. It will be seen that the product is the numerator of a fraction having for its denominator 1, with as many ciphers annexed as there are decimal places in both factors. Hence, the Rule for Multiplication of Decimal Fractions. — Multiply as in simple numbers:... | |
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