Stage 4 · Ratios, Proportion & Percentages

4.2  Proportion: When Two Ratios Are Equal

A proportion says two ratios match — and that one fact gives you a tool for testing, solving, and reading any map.

For ages 10–12 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 1 of 4 in this lesson: 4.2.1 What a proportion means

4.2.1 What a proportion means

Start with the photo above. The small one is 2 wide and 3 tall; enlarging it ×2 makes it 4 wide and 6 tall. The width-to-height ratio of the small photo is 2:3, and of the big one 4:6. Those two ratios are equal — that is exactly why the enlarged photo looks like the original and not stretched or squished. When two ratios are equal we write

2:3 = 4:6 read: "2 is to 3 as 4 is to 6"

and we call that statement a proportion. A ratio by itself is just a comparison; a proportion is a sentence claiming that two comparisons match. Because a ratio can always be written as a fraction, the very same proportion can be written with a fraction bar:

2:3 = 4:6   means the same as   23 = 46

Both forms say 2 compared to 3 is the same comparison as 4 compared to 6. The general pattern, using letters for "any numbers," is

a:b = c:d   or   ab = cd

2:3 4:6 6:9 8:12 = = = ×2 ×3 ×4 multiply both terms by the same number — the ratio never changes
An endless chain of equivalent ratios. Any two links you pick form a proportion, because they are all equal: 2:3 = 4:6 = 6:9 = 8:12.
What a proportion is

A proportion is a statement that two ratios are equal: a:b = c:d, also written ab = cd. You can build a proportion out of any two equivalent ratios, and you can scale a ratio up or down by multiplying (or dividing) both terms by the same number.

A proportion needs the equals sign

Be careful with words. A single comparison like 2:3 is a ratio, not a proportion. It only becomes a proportion when you set it equal to another ratio: 2:3 = 4:6. Ratio = one comparison; proportion = two ratios joined by "=".

🎮 Try itIs it a proportion? Test two ratios

Set two ratios a:b and c:d. The widget reduces each ratio to its simplest value and tells you whether the two are equal — that is, whether they form a proportion.

Ratio 1  a 2 :b 3
Ratio 2  c 4 :d 6
eastmath.com · 4.2 Proportion: When Two Ratios Are Equal · 4.2.1 What a proportion means