Ask your own question, for FREE!
Mathematics 8 Online
OpenStudy (anonymous):

6 4/5 + 6 3/5

OpenStudy (venomblast):

127/5

OpenStudy (anonymous):

just add all the numbers but not the denominators.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

13 2/5

OpenStudy (venomblast):

you added wrong

OpenStudy (anonymous):

no se didn't but she's breaking the rules: "Don’t post only answers - guide the asker to a solution."

OpenStudy (venomblast):

but i cant really show her. this what you learn in grammer school

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Here's how to convert 13.4 to a fraction... There is not much that can be done to figure out how to write 13.4 as a fraction, except to literally use what the decimal portion of your number, the .4, means. Since there are 1 digits in 4, the very last digit is the "10th" decimal place. So we can just say that .4 is the same as 4/10. The fraction 13 4/10 is not reduced to lowest terms. We can reduce this fraction to lowest terms by dividing both the numerator and denominator by 2. Why divide by 2? 2 is the Greatest Common Divisor (GCD) or Greatest Common Factor (GCF) of the numbers 4 and 10. So, this fraction reduced to lowest terms is 13 2/5 So your final answer is: 13.4 can be written as the fraction 13 2/5

OpenStudy (venomblast):

64+63= 127 not 132.

hero (hero):

6 4/5 + 6 3/5 = (6 + 6) + (4/5 + 3/5) = 12(7/5) = 13 (2/5) = 13 2/5

OpenStudy (venomblast):

wait is that a sixty four or six is the whole number?

hero (hero):

It's not difficult to figure out bro

OpenStudy (anonymous):

it's \[6\frac{ 4 }{ 5 } + 4\frac{ 3 }{ 5}\]

hero (hero):

Yeah, just use Lay-text if you have to.

OpenStudy (venomblast):

the number looks close to eachother. i couldnt tell. trust me i know how to do this

hero (hero):

I just want to make a correction. It was: \[6\frac{ 4 }{ 5 } + 6\frac{ 3 }{ 5}\]

OpenStudy (venomblast):

why did u unfan me lol?

hero (hero):

I unfanned everybody bro. It was starting to slow me down.

hero (hero):

Believe me, I didn't want to do that. Doing took away my smart score points.

Can't find your answer? Make a FREE account and ask your own questions, OR help others and earn volunteer hours!

Join our real-time social learning platform and learn together with your friends!
Can't find your answer? Make a FREE account and ask your own questions, OR help others and earn volunteer hours!

Join our real-time social learning platform and learn together with your friends!