Tenths and Hundredths
Understanding Fractions with Denominators of 10 and 100
Fractions with denominators of 10 (tenths) and 100 (hundredths) are special because they are the building blocks of the decimal system. Learning how to work with them makes adding fractions and understanding decimals incredibly easy!
Equivalent Fractions: Changing Tenths to Hundredths
You cannot easily add fractions if their bottom numbers (denominators) are different. To add tenths and hundredths together, you first need to turn the tenths into hundredths.
To write a fraction like 107 as an equivalent fraction with a denominator of 100, you simply multiply both the top (numerator) and the bottom (denominator) by 10.
10×107×10=10070
So, 107 represents exactly the same amount as 10070.
Adding Tenths and Hundredths
Let's look at an example: Add 103+10025.
Step 1: Make the denominators the same. Convert 103 into hundredths by multiplying the top and bottom by 10. 10×103×10=10030
Step 2: Add the numerators. Now that both fractions are in hundredths, the denominators match, and you can just add the top numbers! 10030+10025=10055
Connecting Fractions to Decimals
Because our number system is based on tens, fractions over 10 and 100 can be written directly as decimals.
- Tenths: 103 is written as 0.3 (read as "three tenths").
- Hundredths: 10045 is written as 0.45 (read as "forty-five hundredths").
If you have 107, it is written as 0.7 in decimal form. Because we know that 107=10070, this also proves that 0.7 is exactly the same as 0.70!