Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

fraction

 
Dictionary: frac·tion   (frăk'shən) pronunciation
 
n.
  1. Mathematics. An expression that indicates the quotient of two quantities, such as 1/3.
  2. A disconnected piece; a fragment.
  3. A small part; a bit: moved a fraction of a step.
  4. A chemical component separated by fractionation.

[Middle English fraccioun, a breaking, from Anglo-Norman, from Late Latin frāctiō, frāctiōn-, from Latin frāctus, past participle of frangere, to break.]

WORD HISTORY   Our word fraction did not originally have a mathematical sense. It goes back ultimately to the Latin verb frangere, “to break.” From the stem of the past participle frāctus is derived Late Latin frāctiō (stem frāctiōn-), “a breaking” or “a breaking in pieces,” as in the breaking of the Eucharistic Host. In Medieval Latin the word frāctiō developed its mathematical sense, which was taken into Middle English along with the word. The earliest recorded sense of our word is “an aliquot part of a unit, a fraction or subdivision,” found in a work by Chaucer written about 1400. One of the next recorded instances of the word recalls its origins, referring to the “brekying or fraccioun” of a bone.


Search unanswered questions...
Enter a word or phrase...
All Community Q&A Reference topics
Antonyms: fraction
 

n

Definition: part
Antonyms: entirety, total, whole


 

In arithmetic, a number expressed as a quotient, in which a numerator is divided by a denominator. In a simple fraction, both are integers. A complex fraction has a fraction in the numerator or denominator. In a proper fraction, the numerator is less than the denominator. If the numerator is greater, it is called an improper fraction and can also be written as a mixed number — a whole-number quotient with a proper-fraction remainder. Any fraction can be written in decimal form by carrying out the division of the numerator by the denominator. The result may end at some point, or one or more digits may repeat without end.

For more information on fraction, visit Britannica.com.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: fraction
Top
fraction [Lat.,=breaking], in arithmetic, an expression representing a part, or several equal parts, of a unit.

Notation for Fractions

In writing a fraction, e.g., 2/5 or 2/5, the number after or below the bar represents the total number of parts into which the unit has been divided. This number is called the denominator. The number before or above the bar, the numerator, denotes how many of the equal parts of the unit have been taken. The expression 2/5, then, represents the fact that two of the five parts of the unit or quantity have been taken. The present notation for fractions is of Hindu origin, but some types of fractions were used by the Egyptians before 1600 B.C. Another way of representing fractions is by decimal notation (see decimal system).

Characteristics of Fractions

When the numerator is less than the denominator, the fraction is proper, i.e., less than unity. When the reverse is true, e.g., 5/2, the fraction is improper, i.e., greater than unity. When a fraction is written with a whole number, e.g., 31/2, the expression is called a mixed number. This may also be written as an improper fraction, as 7/2, since three is equal to six halves, and by adding the one half, the total becomes seven halves, or 7/2. A fraction has been reduced to its lowest terms when the numerator and denominator are not divisible by any common divisor except 1, e.g., when 4/6 is reduced to 2/3.

Arithmetic Operations Involving Fractions

When fractions having the same denominator, as 3/10 and 4/10, are added, only the numerators are added, and their sum is then written over the common denominator: 3/10+4/10=7/10. Fractions having unlike denominators, e.g., 1/4 and 1/6, must first be converted into fractions having a common denominator, a denominator into which each denominator may be divided, before addition may be performed. In the case of 1/4 and 1/6, for example, the lowest number into which both 4 and 6 are divisible is 12. When both fractions are converted into fractions having this number as a denominator, then 1/4 becomes 3/12, and 1/6 becomes 2/12. The change is accomplished in the same way in both cases—the denominator is divided into the 12 and the numerator is multiplied by the result of this division. The addition then is performed as in the case of fractions having the same denominator: 1/4+1/6=3/12+2/12=5/12. In subtraction, the numerator and the denominator are subjected to the same preliminary procedure, but then the numerators of the converted fractions are subtracted: 1/41/6=3/122/12=1/12.

In multiplication the numerators of the fractions are multiplied together as are the denominators without needing change: 2/3×3/5=6/15. It should be noted that the result, here 6/15, may be reduced to 2/5 by dividing both numerator and denominator by 3. The division of one fraction by another, e.g., 3/5÷1/2, is performed by inverting the divisor and multiplying: 3/5÷1/2=3/5×2/1=6/5. The same rules apply to the addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division of fractions in which the numerators and denominators are algebraic expressions.


 
Science Dictionary: fraction
Top

A mathematical expression representing the division of one whole number by another. Usually written as two numbers separated by a horizontal or diagonal line, fractions are also used to indicate a part of a whole number or a ratio between two numbers. Fractions may have a value of less than one, as with 1/2, or equal to one, as with 2/2, or more than one, as with 3/2. The top number of a fraction is the numerator and the bottom number is the denominator.

 
Veterinary Dictionary: fraction
Top

Size expressed as a relative part of a unit.

  • attributable f. — the proportion of disease in the exposed group which is caused by the factor.
 
Word Tutor: fraction
Top
pronunciation

IN BRIEF: A quantity less than a whole, or one.

pronunciation A fraction of the driveway had been shoveled because the snow kept falling.

Tutor's tip: A large "faction" (a small political group working for a common cause inside a larger group) of neighbors insists that a "fraction" (a small part; a portion) of the development should be parkland.

 
Wikipedia: Fraction (mathematics)
Top
A cake with one quarter removed. The remaining three quarters are shown.

A fraction (from the Latin fractus, broken) is a number that can represent part of a whole.

The earliest fractions were reciprocals of integers, symbols representing one half, one third, one quarter, and so on.[1] A much later development were the common or "vulgar" fractions which are still used today, and which consist of a numerator and a denominator, the numerator representing a number of equal parts and the denominator telling how many of those parts make up a whole. An example is 3/4, in which the numerator, 3, tells us that the fraction represents 3 equal parts, and the denominator, 4, tells us that 4 parts make up a whole.

A still later development was the decimal fraction, now usually called simply a "decimal", in which the denominator is a power of ten, determined by the number of digits to the right of a decimal separator. In English-speaking and many Asian and Arabic-speaking countries, a period (.) or raised period (•) is used as the decimal separator. In most other countries, however, a comma is used. Thus in 0.75 the numerator is 75 and the denominator is 10 to the second power (because there are two digits to the right of the decimal). Thus the denominator is 100.

A third kind of fraction still in common use is the "per cent", in which the denominator is always 100. Thus 75% means 75/100.

Other uses for fractions are to represent ratios, and to represent division. Thus the fraction 3/4 is also used to represent the ratio 3:4 (three to four) and the division 3 ÷ 4 (three divided by four).

In mathematics, the set of all (vulgar) fractions is called the set of rational numbers, and is represented by the symbol Q.

Contents

Terminology

Historically, any number that did not represent a whole was called a "fraction". The numbers that we now call "decimals" were originally called "decimal fractions"; the numbers we now call "fractions" were called "vulgar fractions", the word "vulgar" meaning "commonplace".

The word is also used in related expressions, such as continued fraction and algebraic fraction—see Special cases below.

Writing fractions

A common or vulgar fraction is usually written as a pair of numbers, the top number called the numerator and the bottom number called the denominator. A line usually separates the numerator and denominator. If the line is slanting it is called a solidus or forward slash, for example 34. If the line is horizontal, it is called a vinculum or, informally, a "fraction bar", thus: tfrac{3}{4}.

The solidus may be omitted from the slanting style (e.g. 34) where space is short and the meaning is obvious from context, for example in road signs in some countries.

In computer diplays and typography, some fractions are printed as a single character. These are:

  • ¼ (one fourth)
  • ½ (one half)
  • ¾ (three fourths)
  • ⅓ (one third)
  • ⅔ (two thirds)
  • ⅛ (one eighth)
  • ⅜ (three eighths)
  • ⅝ (five eighths)
  • ⅞ (seven eighths)

Reading fractions

Fractions are usually read or spoken either by reading the solidus or vinculum as "over", thus 3/4 may be read "three over four" or sometimes "three on four" or "three divided by four". If, however, the denominator is a small whole number, the ordinal name of that number is often used: "three fourths". This usage is not as common when the denominator is bigger than ten: in reading 9/11, "nine over eleven" is more common than "nine elevenths". However, ordinal names are often used for many denominators beyond 10 (twelfths, sixteenths, twentieths, thirty-seconds,...), especially for powers of ten (hundredths, thousandths,...) and for unit fractions (one-sixtieth).

Usage

Fractions are used most often when the denominator is relatively small. It is easier to multiply 32 by 316 than to do the same calculation using the fraction's decimal equivalent (0.1875). It is also more accurate to multiply 15 by 13, for example, than it is to multiply 15 by a decimal approximation of one third. To change a fraction to a decimal, divide the numerator by the denominator, and round off to the desired accuracy.

Forms of fractions

Vulgar, proper, and improper fractions

A vulgar fraction (or common fraction) is a rational number written as one integer (the numerator) divided by a non-zero integer (the denominator).

A vulgar fraction is said to be a proper fraction if the absolute value of the numerator is less than the absolute value of the denominator—that is, if the absolute value of the entire fraction is less than 1; a vulgar fraction is said to be an improper fraction (US, British or Australian) or top-heavy fraction (British, occasionally North America) if the absolute value of the numerator is greater than or equal to the absolute value of the denominator (e.g. 97).[2]

Mixed numbers

A mixed number is the sum of a whole number and a proper fraction. This sum is implied without the use of any visible operator such as "+"; for example, in referring to two entire cakes and three quarters of another cake, the whole and fractional parts of the number are written next to each other: 2+tfrac{3}{4}=2tfrac{3}{4}.

An improper fraction can be thought of as another way to write a mixed number; consider the 2tfrac{3}{4} example below.

We can imagine that the two entire cakes are each divided into quarters, so that the denominator for the whole cakes is the same as the denominator for the parts. Then each whole cake contributes tfrac{4}{4} to the total, so tfrac{4}{4}+tfrac{4}{4}+tfrac{3}{4}=tfrac{11}{4} is another way of writing 2tfrac{3}{4}.

A mixed number can be converted to an improper fraction in three steps:

  1. Multiply the whole part by the denominator of the fractional part.
  2. Add the numerator of the fractional part to that product.
  3. The resulting sum is the numerator of the new (improper) fraction, with the 'new' denominator remaining precisely the same as for the original fractional part of the mixed number.

Similarly, an improper fraction can be converted to a mixed number:

  1. Divide the numerator by the denominator.
  2. The quotient (without remainder) becomes the whole part and the remainder becomes the numerator of the fractional part.
  3. The new denominator is the same as that of the original improper fraction.

Equivalent fractions

Multiplying the numerator and denominator of a fraction by the same (non-zero) number, the results of the new fraction is said to be equivalent to the original fraction. The word equivalent means that the two fractions have the same value. That is, they retain the same integrity - the same balance or proportion. This is true because for any number n, multiplying by tfrac{n}{n} is really multiplying by one, and any number multiplied by one has the same value as the original number. For instance, consider the fraction tfrac{1}{2}: when the numerator and denominator are both multiplied by 2, the result is tfrac{2}{4}, which has the same value (0.5) as tfrac{1}{2}. To picture this visually, imagine cutting the example cake into four pieces; two of the pieces together (tfrac{2}{4}) make up half the cake (tfrac{1}{2}).

For example: tfrac{1}{3}, tfrac{2}{6}, tfrac{3}{9} and tfrac{100}{300} are all equivalent fractions.

Dividing the numerator and denominator of a fraction by the same non-zero number will also yield an equivalent fraction. This is called reducing or simplifying the fraction. A fraction in which the numerator and denominator have no factors in common (other than 1) is said to be irreducible or in its lowest or simplest terms. For instance, tfrac{3}{9} is not in lowest terms because both 3 and 9 can be exactly divided by 3. In contrast, tfrac{3}{8} is in lowest terms—the only number that is a factor of both 3 and 8 is 1.

Reciprocals and the "invisible denominator"

The reciprocal of a fraction is another fraction with the numerator and denominator reversed. The reciprocal of tfrac{3}{7}, for instance, is tfrac{7}{3}.

Because any number divided by 1 results in the same number, it is possible to write any whole number as a fraction by using 1 as the denominator: 17 = tfrac{17}{1} (1 is sometimes referred to as the "invisible denominator"). Therefore, except for zero, every fraction or whole number has a reciprocal. The reciprocal of 17 would be tfrac{1}{17}.

Complex fractions

A complex fraction (or compound fraction) is a fraction in which the numerator or denominator contains a fraction. For example, cfrac{tfrac{1}{2}}{tfrac{1}{3}} is a complex fraction. To simplify a complex fraction, divide the numerator by the denominator, as with any other fraction (see the section on division for more details):

cfrac{tfrac{1}{2}}{tfrac{1}{3}}=tfrac{1}{2}timestfrac{3}{1}=tfrac{3}{2}.
cfrac{tfrac{3}{2}}5=tfrac{3}{2}timestfrac{1}{5}=tfrac{3}{10}.
cfrac{8}{tfrac{1}{3}}=8timestfrac{3}{1}=24.

Arithmetic with fractions

Fractions, like whole numbers, obey the commutative, associative, and distributive laws, and the rule against division by zero.

Comparing fractions

Comparing fractions with the same denominator only requires comparing the numerators.

tfrac{3}{4}>tfrac{2}{4} because 3>2.

One way to compare fractions with different denominators is to find a common denominator. To compare tfrac{a}{b} and tfrac{c}{d}, these are converted to tfrac{ad}{bd} and tfrac{bc}{bd}. Then bd is a common denominator and the numerators ad and bc can be compared.

tfrac{2}{3} ? tfrac{1}{2} gives tfrac{4}{6}>tfrac{3}{6}

As a short cut, known as "cross multiplying", you can just compare ad and bc, without computing the denominator.

tfrac{5}{18} ? tfrac{4}{17}

Multiply 17 by 5 and multiply 18 by 4. Since 85 is greater than 72, tfrac{5}{18}>tfrac{4}{17}.

Another method of comparing fractions is this: if two fractions have the same numerator, then the fraction with the smaller denominator is the larger fraction. The reasoning is that since, in the first fraction, fewer equal pieces are needed to make up a whole, each piece must be larger.

Also note that every negative number, including negative fractions, is less than zero, and every positive number, including positive fractions, is greater than zero, so every negative fraction is less than any positive fraction.[3]

Addition

The first rule of addition is that only like quantities can be added; for example, various quantities of quarters. Unlike quantities, such as adding thirds to quarters, must first be converted to like quantities as described below: Imagine a pocket containing two quarters, and another pocket containing three quarters; in total, there are five quarters. Since four quarters is equivalent to one (dollar), this can be represented as follows:

tfrac24+tfrac34=tfrac54=1tfrac14.
If tfrac12 of a cake is to be added to tfrac14 of a cake, the pieces need to be converted into comparable quantities, such as cake-eighths or cake-quarters.

Adding unlike quantities

To add fractions containing unlike quantities (e.g. quarters and thirds), it is necessary to convert all amounts to like quantities. It is easy to work out the chosen type of fraction to convert to; simply multiply together the two denominators (bottom number) of each fraction.

For adding quarters to thirds, both types of fraction are converted to tfrac14timestfrac13=tfrac1{12} (twelfths).

Consider adding the following two quantities:

tfrac34+tfrac23

First, convert tfrac34 into twelfths by multiplying both the numerator and denominator by three: tfrac34timestfrac33=tfrac9{12}. Note that tfrac33 is equivalent to 1, which shows that tfrac34 is equivalent to the resulting tfrac9{12}.

Secondly, convert tfrac23 into twelfths by multiplying both the numerator and denominator by four: tfrac23timestfrac44=tfrac8{12}. Note that tfrac44 is equivalent to 1, which shows that tfrac23 is equivalent to the resulting tfrac8{12}. lmao.. Now it can be seen that:

tfrac34+tfrac23

is equivalent to:

tfrac9{12}+tfrac8{12}=tfrac{17}{12}=1tfrac5{12}

This method always works, but sometimes there is a smaller denominator that can be used (a least common denominator). For example, to add tfrac{3}{4} and tfrac{5}{12} the denominator 48 can be used (the product of 4 and 12), but the smaller denominator 12 may also be used, being the least common multiple of 4 and 12.

tfrac34+tfrac{5}{12}=tfrac{9}{12}+tfrac{5}{12}=tfrac{14}{12}=tfrac76=1tfrac16

This method can be expressed algebraically:

tfrac{a}{b} + tfrac {c}{d} = tfrac{ad+cb}{bd}

And for expressions consisting of the addition of three fractions:

tfrac{a}{b} + tfrac {c}{d} + tfrac{e}{f} = tfrac{a(df)+c(bf)+e(bd)}{bdf}

Subtraction

The process for subtracting fractions is, in essence, the same as that of adding them: find a common denominator, and change each fraction to an equivalent fraction with the chosen common denominator. The resulting fraction will have that denominator, and its numerator will be the result of subtracting the numerators of the original fractions. For instance,

tfrac23-tfrac12=tfrac46-tfrac36=tfrac16

Multiplication and division

Multiplying by a whole number

Considering the cake example above, if you have a quarter of the cake and you multiply the amount by three, then you end up with three quarters. We can write this numerically as follows:

textstyle{3 times {1 over 4} = {3 over 4}},!

As another example, suppose that five people work for three hours out of a seven hour day (ie. for three sevenths of the work day). In total, they will have worked for 15 hours (5 x 3 hours each), or 15 sevenths of a day. Since 7 sevenths of a day is a whole day and 14 sevenths is two days, then in total, they will have worked for 2 days and a seventh of a day. Numerically:

textstyle{5 times {3 over 7} = {15 over 7} = 2{1 over 7}} ,!

Multiplying by a fraction

Considering the cake example above, if you have a quarter of the cake and you multiply the amount by a third, then you end up with a twelfth of the cake. In other words, a third of a quarter (or a third times a quarter) is a twelfth. Why? Because we are splitting each quarter into three pieces, and four quarters times three makes 12 parts (or twelfths). We can write this numerically as follows:

textstyle{{1 over 3} times {1 over 4} = {1 over 12}},!

As another example, suppose that five people do an equal amount of work that totals three hours out of a seven hour day. Each person will have done a fifth of the work, so they will have worked for a fifth of three sevenths of a day. Numerically:

textstyle{{1 over 5} times {3 over 7} = {3 over 35}},!

In general, when we multiply fractions, we multiply the two numerators (the top numbers) to make the new numerator, and multiply the two denominators (the bottom numbers) to make the new denominator. For example:

textstyle{{5 over 6} times {7 over 8} = {5 times 7 over 6 times 8} = {35 over 48}},!

When multiplying (or dividing), it may be possible to choose to cancel down crosswise multiples (often simply called, 'cancelling tops and bottom lines') that share a common factor. [4] For example:

27 X 78 = 2 17 1 X 7 18 4 = 11 X 14 = 14

A two is a common factor in both the numerator of the left fraction and the denominator of the right so is divided out of both. A seven is a common factor of the left denominator and right numerator.

Mixed numbers

When multiplying mixed numbers, it's best to convert the mixed number into an improper fraction. For example:

textstyle{3 times 2{3 over 4} = 3 times left ({{8 over 4} + {3 over 4}} right ) = 3 times {11 over 4} = {33 over 4} = 8{1 over 4}},!

In other words, textstyle{2{3 over 4}} is the same as textstyle{({8 over 4} + {3 over 4})}, making 11 quarters in total (because 2 cakes, each split into quarters makes 8 quarters total) and 33 quarters is textstyle{8{1 over 4}}, since 8 cakes, each made of quarters, is 32 quarters in total).

Division

To divide by a fraction, simply multiply by the reciprocal of that fraction.

textstyle{5 div {1 over 2} = 5 times {2 over 1} = 5 times 2 = 10}
textstyle{{2 over 3} div {2 over 5} = {2 over 3} times {5 over 2} = {10 over 6} = {5 over 3}}

To understand why this works, consider the following:

6 inches divided by 3 inches = 2 means that we can divide 6 inches into two 3 inch parts.
6 miles divided by 3 miles = 2 means that we can divide 6 miles into two 3 mile parts.
6 half dollars divided by 3 half dollars = 2 means that we can divide 6 half dollars into two stacks of 3 half dollars each.
6/2 divided by 3/2 = 2 means that we can divide 6/2 into two parts, each 3/2 in size.

Thus, if fractions have the same denominator, to divide we just divide the numerators and remove the denominator.

But what if fractions have different denominators?

Then, we could get a common denominator, and divide the numerators, as follows:

textstyle{{a over b} div {c over d} = {ad over bd} div {bc over bd} = {ad over bc}.}
But this takes too long. Instead, we learn the rule "invert and multiply", which gives the same answer.
textstyle{{a over b} div {c over d} = {a over b} times {d over c} = {ad over bc}.}

Here is a mathematical proof that to divide we invert and multiply.

  • Theorem
textstyle{{a over b} div {c over d} = {ad over bc}.}
  • Proof
We know that division is defined to be the inverse of multiplication. That is,
textstyle{m div n = q}
if and only if
textstyle{n times q = m}.
In the expression we want to prove, multiply the quotient by the divisor 
textstyle{{c over d} times {ad over bc} = {acd over bcd}} which reduces to textstyle{{a over b}}.
Therefore,
textstyle{{a over b} div {c over d} = {ad over bc}.}

Another way to understand this is the following:

Question, does
textstyle{frac a b div frac c d = frac a b times frac d c}
Given/Accepted
I. Any number divided by itself is one (e.g. textstyle{frac d d = frac 1 1})
II. When a number is multiplied by one it does not change (e.g. textstyle{frac a b times frac 1 1 = frac a b times frac d d = frac a b})
III. If two fractions have common denominators, then the numerators may be divided to find the quotient (e.g. textstyle{frac {ad}{bd} div frac {bc}{bd} = ad div bc})
Proof
1. textstyle{frac {a} {b} div frac {c} {d}}, Problem
2. textstyle{frac {a  d} {b  d} div frac {b c} {b  d}}, Multiplied the first fraction by textstyle{frac d d} and the second fraction by textstyle{frac b b}, which is the same as multiplying by one, and as accepted above (I & II) does not change the value of the fraction
Note: These values of one were chosen so the fractions would have a common denominator; bd is the common denominator.
3. textstyle{frac {ad}{bd} div frac {bc}{bd} = ad div bc}, From what was given in (III)
4. textstyle{ad div bc = frac {ad}{bc}}, Changed notation
5. textstyle{frac {ad}{bc} = frac a b times frac d c }, Can be seen
6. textstyle{frac a b times frac d c }, Solution

About 4,000 years ago Egyptians divided with fractions using slightly different methods. They used least common multiples with unit fractions. Their methods gave the same answer that our modern methods give.[5]

Converting repeating decimals to fractions

Decimal numbers, while arguably more useful to work with when performing calculations, lack the same kind of precision that regular fractions (as they are explained in this article) have. Sometimes an infinite number of decimals is required to convey the same kind of precision. Thus, it is often useful to convert repeating decimals into fractions.

For repeating patterns where the repeating pattern begins immediately after the decimal point, a simple division of the pattern by the same number of nines as numbers it has will suffice. For example (the pattern is highlighted in bold):

0.555555555555… = 5/9
0.626262626262… = 62/99
0.264264264264… = 264/999
0.629162916291… = 6291/9999

In case zeros precede the pattern, the nines are suffixed by the same number of zeros:

0.0555… = 5/90
0.000392392392… = 392/999000
0.00121212… = 12/9900

In case a non-repeating set of decimals precede the pattern (such as 0.1523987987987…), we must equate it as the sum of the non-repeating and repeating parts:

0.1523 + 0.0000987987987…

Then, convert both of these to fractions. Since the first part is not repeating, it is not converted according to the pattern given above:

1523/10000 + 987/9990000

We add these fractions by expressing both with a common divisor...

1521477/9990000 + 987/9990000

And add them.

1522464/9990000

Finally, we simplify it:

31718/208125

Rationalization

Rationalization of a fraction is a technique of simplifying denominators of complicated fractional expressions, such as frac{14}{2-sqrt{3}} . It is useful in working with complex numbers, such as frac{2+3i}{4-i} . A fraction may need to be rationalized if the denominator contains any irrational numbers, imaginary numbers or complex numbers in order to make it easier to work with. The process of rationalization involves multiplying the top and the bottom of a fraction by the conjugate of the denominator so that the denominator becomes a rational number. Even if this process results in the numerator being irrational or complex, the process may still facilitate subsequent manipulations by reducing the number of irrationals one has to work with in the denominator, or by making the denominator real in the case of a complex expression.

Special cases

A unit fraction is a vulgar fraction with a numerator of 1, e.g. tfrac{1}{7}.

An Egyptian fraction is the sum of distinct unit fractions, e.g. tfrac{1}{2}+tfrac{1}{3}. This term derives from the fact that the ancient Egyptians expressed all fractions except tfrac{1}{3}, tfrac{2}{3}and tfrac{3}{4} in this manner.

A dyadic fraction is a vulgar fraction in which the denominator is a power of two, e.g. tfrac{1}{8}.

An expression that has the form of a fraction but actually represents division by or into an irrational number is sometimes called an "irrational fraction". A common example is textstyle{frac{pi}{2}}, the radian measure of a right angle.

Rational numbers are the quotient field of integers. Rational functions are functions evaluated in the form of a fraction, where the numerator and denominator are polynomials. These rational expressions are the quotient field of the polynomials (over some integral domain).

A continued fraction is an expression such as a_0 + frac{1}{a_1 + frac{1}{a_2 + ...}} , where the ai are integers. This is not an element of a quotient field.

The term partial fraction is used in algebra, when decomposing rational expressions (a fraction with an algebraic expression in the denominator). The goal is to write the rational expression as the sum of other rational expressions with denominators of lesser degree. For example, the rational expression textstyle{2x over (x^2-1)} can be rewritten as the sum of two fractions: textstyle{1 over (x+1)} and textstyle{1 over (x-1)}. This is useful for calculating certain integrals in calculus.

Pedagogical tools

In primary schools, fractions have been demonstrated through Cuisenaire rods. Other materials used to teach fractions to students in the U.S. include fraction bars, fraction strips, fraction circles, paper (for folding or cutting), pattern blocks and computer software.

See also the external links below.

History

The earliest known use of fractions is ca. 2800 BC as Ancient Indus Valley units of measurement.[citation needed] The Egyptians used Egyptian fractions ca. 1000 BC. The Greeks used unit fractions and later continued fractions and followers of the Greek philosopher Pythagoras, ca. 530 BC, discovered that the square root of two cannot be expressed as a fraction. In 150 BC Jain mathematicians in India wrote the "Sthananga Sutra", which contains work on the theory of numbers, arithmetical operations, operations with fractions.

In Sanskrit literature, fractions, or rational numbers were always expressed by an integer followed by a fraction. When the integer is written on a line, the fraction is placed below it and is itself written on two lines, the numerator called amsa part on the first line, the denominator called cheda “divisor” on the second below. If the fraction is written without any particular additional sign, one understands that it is added to the integer above it. If it is marked by a small circle or a cross (the shape of the “plus” sign in the West) placed on its right, one understands that it is subtracted from the integer. For example, Bhaskara I writes[6]

६   १   २ 
१   १   १ 
४  ५   ९

That is,

6   1   2 
1   1   1 
4   5   9

to denote 6+1/4, 1+1/5, and 2–1/9

Al-Hassār, a Muslim mathematician from the Maghreb (North Africa) specializing in Islamic inheritance jurisprudence during the 12th century, developed the modern symbolic mathematical notation for fractions, where the numerator and denominator are separated by a horizontal bar. This same fractional notation appears soon after in the work of Fibonacci in the 13th century.[7]

In discussing the origins of decimal fractions, Dirk Jan Struik states that (p. 7):[8]

"The introduction of decimal fractions as a common computational practice can be dated back to the Flemish pamphlet De Thiende, published at Leyden in 1585, together with a French translation, La Disme, by the Flemish mathematician Simon Stevin (1548-1620), then settled in the Northern Netherlands. It is true that decimal fractions were used by the Chinese many centuries before Stevin and that the Persian astronomer Al-Kāshī used both decimal and sexagesimal fractions with great ease in his Key to arithmetic (Samarkand, early fifteenth century).[9]"

While the Persian mathematician Jamshīd al-Kāshī claimed to have discovered decimal fractions himself in the 15th century, J. Lennart Berggrenn notes that he was mistaken, as decimal fractions were first used five centuries before him by the Baghdadi mathematician Abu'l-Hasan al-Uqlidisi as early as the 10th century.[10]

See also

References

  1. ^ Howard Eves, An Introduction to the History of Mathematics, Saunders, 1990, ISBN 0030295580, "The Egyptians endeavored to avoid some of the computational difficulties encountered with fractions by representing all fractions, except 2/3, as the sum of so-called unit fractions. ... Thus, we find 2/7 expressed as 1/4 + 1/28." The book has a picture of the symbols the Egyptians used for unit fractions. "One fourth" looks like a blacked in square with an ellipse over it, 2/3 like an ellipse with an upside down U crossing it.
  2. ^ World Wide Words: Vulgar fractions
  3. ^ Visual Fractions tutorial
  4. ^ BBC GCSE Bitsize
  5. ^ Milo Gardner (December 19, 2005). "Math History". http://egyptianmath.blogspot.com. Retrieved on 2006-01-18.  See for examples and an explanation.
  6. ^ (Filliozat 2004, p. 152)
  7. ^ Prof. Ahmed Djebbar (June 2008). "Mathematics in the Medieval Maghrib: General Survey on Mathematical Activities in North Africa". FSTC Limited. http://muslimheritage.com/topics/default.cfm?ArticleID=952. Retrieved on 2008-07-19. 
  8. ^ D.J. Struik, A Source Book in Mathematics 1200-1800 (Princeton University Press, New Jersey, 1986). ISBN 0-691-02397-2
  9. ^ P. Luckey, Die Rechenkunst bei Ğamšīd b. Mas'ūd al-Kāšī (Steiner, Wiesbaden, 1951).
  10. ^ Berggren, J. Lennart (2007). "Mathematics in Medieval Islam". The Mathematics of Egypt, Mesopotamia, China, India, and Islam: A Sourcebook. Princeton University Press. p. 518. ISBN 9780691114859. 

 
Translations: Fraction
Top

Dansk (Danish)
n. - brøkdel, stump, fraktion

Nederlands (Dutch)
breuk, fragment, (onder)deel, beetje, verdeling van het brood der Eucharistie

Français (French)
n. - (gén, Math) fraction, part infime
v. tr. - fractionner, sectionner, faire une fraction
v. intr. - fractionner, sectionner, faire une fraction

Deutsch (German)
n. - Bruch, Bruchteil
v. - teilen

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - (μικρό) κομμάτι, τμήμα, μέρος, (μαθημ.) κλάσμα
v. - μοιράζω στα ίσα

Italiano (Italian)
frazione

Português (Portuguese)
n. - fração (f)
v. - fracionar

Русский (Russian)
дробь, частица, крупица, фракция

Español (Spanish)
n. - fracción, fragmento, un poco
v. tr. - fraccionar
v. intr. - fraccionarse

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - bråkdel, bråk (mat.), fraktion (polit. o dyl.), fraktion (kem.), delrätt (börs)
v. - räkna med bråk (mat.), bilda fraktion

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
分数, 破片, 小部分

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 分數, 破片, 小部分

한국어 (Korean)
n. - 분수, 파편, 빵을 나누기

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - 断片, 小部分, 分数, 分割, 端数

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) كسر , جزء (فعل) جزء, قسم‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮שבר, חלקיק, חלק, בציעת לחם הקודש (בכנסייה), קבוצה בעלת דיעה שונה בארגון‬


 
Best of the Web: fraction
Top

Some good "fraction" pages on the web:


American Sign Language
commtechlab.msu.edu
 

Math
mathworld.wolfram.com
 
 
 

 

Copyrights:

Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Answers Corporation Antonyms. © 1999-2009 by Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/  Read more
Science Dictionary. The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Third Edition Edited by E.D. Hirsch, Jr., Joseph F. Kett, and James Trefil. Copyright © 2002 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin. All rights reserved.  Read more
Veterinary Dictionary. Saunders Comprehensive Veterinary Dictionary 3rd Edition. Copyright © 2007 by D.C. Blood, V.P. Studdert and C.C. Gay, Elsevier. All rights reserved.  Read more
Word Tutor. Copyright © 2004-present by eSpindle Learning, a 501(c) nonprofit organization. All rights reserved.
eSpindle provides personalized spelling and vocabulary tutoring online; free trial Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Fraction (mathematics)" Read more
Translations. Copyright © 2007, WizCom Technologies Ltd. All rights reserved.  Read more