1.

The sum of  9/14  + 13/-14​

Answer»

align="absmiddle" alt="\huge{ \pink{\bigstar{\underline{\underline{Answer}}}}}" CLASS="latex-formula" id="TexFormula1" src="HTTPS://tex.z-dn.net/?f=%5Chuge%7B%20%5Cpink%7B%5Cbigstar%7B%5Cunderline%7B%5Cunderline%7BAnswer%7D%7D%7D%7D%7D" title="\huge{ \pink{\bigstar{\underline{\underline{Answer}}}}}">

━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━

\implies Addition Of The Fractions:—

Ques: \implies \large{\red{\bf{ \frac{9}{14} +  \frac{13}{14} }}}

\implies \large{\blue{\bf{Solution:—}}}

\implies \large{\green{\sf{Denominators \: are \: same \: so \: no \: need \: to \: take \: the \: LCM.}}}

\implies \large{\green{\sf{ \frac{9}{14} +  \frac{13}{-14}  }}}

\implies \large{\green{\sf{ \frac{9 + 13}{-14}  =  \frac{22}{-14} }}}

\implies \large{\red{\bf{ \frac{ \not{22}}{ \not{-14}} =  \frac{11}{-7}  }}}

\implies \large{\red{\bf{ \frac{11}{-7} =  1\frac{4}{-7}  }}}

Follow these steps if you didn't understand it.

  • As the denominator's were same so we EASILY solved it but in case where denominator's are not same we take the LCM of the denominator's. Examples given below:—

\implies \large{\red{\bf{ \frac{25}{2} +  \frac{46}{6}  }}}

\implies \large{\red{\bf{Take \: LCM \: of \: 2 \: and \: 6.}}}

\implies \large{\red{\bf{LCM = 6}}}

\implies \large{\red{\bf{ \frac{75 + 46}{6}  = \frac{121}{6} }}}

\implies \large{\red{\bf{ \frac{121}{6} =  20\frac{1}{6}  }}}

━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━



Discussion

No Comment Found

Related InterviewSolutions