5th frac decimals

12345678910111213141516171819
Across
  1. 3. Combines a whole number and a fraction. For example, 1 1/2 is a mixed number.
  2. 6. Numbers in the tens place value. For example, in the number 32, the "3" is in the tens place.
  3. 8. When the numerator (top number) is smaller than the denominator (bottom number).
  4. 11. Top number in a fraction. It shows how many of those equal parts we're talking about.
  5. 12. Smaller parts of a whole than tenths. They are divided into 100 equal parts.
  6. 14. When the numerator (top number) is equal to or larger than the denominator (bottom number).
  7. 16. The part that is not a whole number, usually shown as a fraction or decimal.
  8. 17. Dot in a decimal number that separates the whole part from the smaller parts (tenths, hundredths, thousandths, etc.).
  9. 19. Way to show parts of a whole. It's written as a number on top (numerator) and a number on the bottom (denominator).
Down
  1. 1. Numbers in the hundreds place value. For example, in the number 789, the "7" is in the hundreds place.
  2. 2. Parts of a whole that come after the decimal point, divided into 10 equal parts.
  3. 4. Bottom number in a fraction. It tells us how many equal parts the whole is divided into.
  4. 5. Different fractions that represent the same amount or part of a whole. They have different numbers on top and bottom but mean the same thing.
  5. 7. When you're adding or subtracting fractions, a common denominator is a number that both fractions share, making it easier to work with them.
  6. 9. Number with a dot (decimal point) that separates the whole number from the parts of a whole.
  7. 10. Even smaller parts of a whole, divided into 1,000 equal parts.
  8. 13. Its "flipped" version. For example, the reciprocal of 3/4 is 4/3.
  9. 15. Numbers in the thousands place value. For example, in the number 4,567, the "4" is in the thousands place.
  10. 18. Numbers in the ones place value.