Basic Math and Pre-Algebra For Dummies (50 page)

BOOK: Basic Math and Pre-Algebra For Dummies
4.44Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
  1. Add the fractions.

  2. Switch improper fractions to mixed numbers, write down the fractional part, and carry over the whole number.

    Because the result is an improper fraction, convert it to the mixed number
    and then reduce it to
    (for more on converting and reducing fractions, see Chapter
    9
    ). I recommend doing these calculations on a piece of scrap paper.

    Write down
    and carry the 2 to the whole number column.

  3. Add the whole numbers.
    • 2 + 5 + 11 + 3 + 1 = 22

Here's how the problem looks after you solve it:

Summing up mixed numbers when the denominators are different

The most difficult type of mixed number addition is when the denominators of the fractions are different. This difference doesn't change Steps 2 or 3, but it does make Step 1 tougher.

For example, suppose you want to add
.

  1. Add the fractions.

    Add
    . You can use any method from earlier in this chapter. Here, I use the easy way:

  2. Switch improper fractions to mixed numbers, write down the fractional part, and carry over the whole number.

    This fraction is improper, so change it to the mixed number
    . Fortunately, the fractional part of this mixed number isn't reducible.

    Write down the
    and carry over the 1 to the whole number column.

  3. Add the whole numbers.

Here's how the completed problem looks:

Subtracting mixed numbers

The basic way to subtract mixed numbers is close to the way you add them. Again, the subtraction looks more like what you're used to with whole numbers. Here's how to subtract two mixed numbers:

  1. Find the difference of the fractional parts using any method you like.
  2. Find the difference of the two whole number parts.

Along the way, though, you may encounter a couple more twists and turns. I keep you on track so that, by the end of this section, you can do any mixed-number subtraction problem.

Taking away mixed numbers when the denominators are the same

As with addition, subtraction is much easier when the denominators are the same. For example, suppose you want to subtract
. Here's what the problem looks like in column form:

Other books

Fried & True by Fay Jacobs
The Reluctant Celebrity by Ellingham, Laurie
#GIRLBOSS by Sophia Amoruso
Girls from da Hood 11 by Nikki Turner
Tales Of A RATT by Blotzer, Bobby
Caught in the Act by Jill Sorenson
Tantric Coconuts by Greg Kincaid
The Warlord of the Air by Michael Moorcock
Under Karin by Andrea Jordan
Edge of Flight by Kate Jaimet