Ch 5 Ratios & Proportion Vocabulary
Ratio
A comparison of two quantities using division; ratios can be expressed in 3 different ways (to, colon or as a fraction); ratios must ALWAYS be in simplest form
Rate
A comparison of two quantities with different units and uses the term per
complex fraction
A fraction has at least one fraction in the numerator, denominator, or both. You may need to simplify complex fractions when finding ratios and rates.
Equation
A number sentence containing an equal sign. ex. x+7=9
Unit Rate
A rate with a denominator of 1; money should always be in the numerator when finding unit rate
Ratio Table
A table with columns filled with pairs of numbers that have the same ratio.
Proportion
An equation stating that two ratios are equivalent.
Testing for Direct Variation
Since all Direct Variation equations MUST pass through the origin (0,0), we will use (0,0) as our test coordinates on all equations EXCEPT division. x and y SHOW direct variation when you substitute (0,0) into the equation and you get a true statement (for ex. 2=2) x and y DO NOT SHOW direct variation when you substitute (0,0) into the equation and you DO NOT GET A TRUE STATEMENT (for ex. 3= -5)
Greatest Common Factor (GCF)
The largest of the common factors of two or more numbers
simplest form
The lowest form of a fraction.
Equalivalent Ratios
Two equal ratios that are multiplied or divided by the same number
Proportional
Two ratios that form an equivalent proportion; these ratios simplify to the same ratio
direct variation
an equation of the form y=kx when a line passes through the origin; k (slope) is called the constant of proportionality.
negative slope
falls from left to right
cross products
from the proportion, the products of numbers on the diagonal
zero slope
horizontal line
Graph of Direct Variation
must go through the origin (0,0) AND must be a line
positive slope
rises from left to right
constant of proportionality
slope; k = y/x
Pay rate
the amount of money ($) workers are paid per hour, week etc.
slope
the rate of change between any 2 two points on a line. It is a measure of the steepness of a line. To find the slope of a line, find the ratio of the change in y (vertical change) to the change in x (horizontal change). slope = change in y/change in x slope = rise/run
undefined slope
vertical line
Cross Product Method
when the cross products of a proportion are equal, the ratios are proportional