34. Not Quite. Have a quick review. Remember to reduce your fractions. Try again.
35. Not Quite. Have a quick review. Remember to reduce your fractions. Try again.
36. Not Quite. Have a quick review. Remember to reduce your fractions. Try again.
37. Not Quite. Have a quick review. Remember to reduce your fractions. Try again.
38. Not Quite. Have a quick review. Remember to reduce your fractions. Try again.
39. Not Quite. Have a quick review. Remember to reduce your fractions. Try again.
40. Not Quite. Have a quick review. Remember to reduce your fractions. Try again.
41. Not Quite. Have a quick review. Remember to reduce your fractions. Try again.
42. Not Quite. Have a quick review. Remember to reduce your fractions. Try again.
43. Not Quite. Have a quick review. Remember to reduce your fractions. Try again.
44. Not Quite. Have a quick review. Remember to reduce your fractions. Try again.
45. Not Quite. Have a quick review. Remember to reduce your fractions. Try again.
46. Not Quite. Have a quick review. Remember to reduce your fractions. Try again.
47. Not Quite. Have a quick review. Remember to reduce your fractions. Try again.
48. Not Quite. Have a quick review. Remember to reduce your fractions. Try again.
49.
Editor's Notes
In woodworking, if you measure incorrectly and cut your board at the wrong spot, you could have to remake the whole piece. This can get expensive, time consuming, and frustrating. In drafting, one wrong measurement early on in the drawing just gets compounded upon each time you make another measurement. One mistake can ruining a whole drawing causing you to have to redo it. Since some drawings can take days or even weeks to complete, it is important to measure right from the beginning every time.
An inch, in this case, is broken into 16 equal sections. Counting from the left you can tell the measurement each mark represents: 1/16”, 2/16” (=1/8”), 3/16”, etc. Remember to reduce your fractions; in practice, there is no such thing as 12/16”. It is ¾”.