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The denominator of a fraction is 3 more than its numerator. If 2 is added to both the numerator and the denominator, the 2 new fraction is equivalent to Find the 3 original fraction. (Hint: Let the numerator of the original fraction be x)​

User Siddhartha Ghosh
by
2.5k points

1 Answer

15 votes
15 votes

Answer:

4/7

Explanation:

Using the hint, we have an original fraction of x/(x+3). The given manipulations and relations can be used to find the value of x, and the original fraction.

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adding 2 to each term

The new fraction is ...


(x+2)/((x+3)+2)=(x+2)/(x+5)\\

new value

Apparently, the new value of this fraction is 2/3. We can use this to find the value of x.


(x+2)/(x+5)=(2)/(3)\\\\3(x+2)=2(x+5)\qquad\text{multiply by $3(x+5)$}\\\\3x+6=2x+10\qquad\text{eliminate parentheses}\\\\x=4\qquad\text{subtract $2x+6$}

The original fraction is ...

4/(4+3) = 4/7

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Alternate solution

In the ratio 2/3, the numerator is twice the difference between the denominator and numerator. 2 = 2(3 -2)

The problem statement tells us the difference between the numerator and denominator is 3. That is not changed by adding the same number to each. This means the fraction equivalent to 2/3 is (2·3)/(3·3) = 6/9. Subtracting 2 from each of the numerator and denominator gives the original fraction:

(6-2)/(9-2) = 4/7

User Eferion
by
2.9k points
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