Stage 4 · Ratios, Proportion & Percentages

4.1  From Fractions to Ratios: Comparing Two Quantities

A ratio is a "so-many to so-many" comparison — and once you see how it leans on fractions and division, every ratio question gets easier.

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

Point 1 of 5 in this lesson: 4.1.1 What a ratio means

4.1.1 What a ratio means

A ratio is a "so-many to so-many" comparison of two quantities. Picture making sugar water with 2 scoops of sugar and 3 scoops of water. The ratio of sugar to water is 2:3, which we read aloud as "2 to 3." You can also write it with the word "to" (2 to 3) or as a fraction (23) — three faces of the same comparison. The little colon is just shorthand for the word "to."

sugar water 2 3 part to part: sugar : water = 2 : 3 part to whole: sugar : total = 2 : 5
The same picture gives two different ratios. Part-to-part compares the groups to each other (2:3). Part-to-whole compares one group to the total of 5 scoops (2:5). Always say which one you mean.

That figure hides a trap worth naming out loud. Part-to-part compares the two groups directly: sugar to water is 2:3. Part-to-whole compares one group to the total of everything: since there are 2 + 3 = 5 scoops in all, the ratio of sugar to the whole mix is 2:5. Both are correct ratios about the same drink — they just answer different questions, so you must be clear about which comparison you are making.

Worked example — reading and writing ratios

A fruit bowl has 4 apples and 6 oranges.

(a) Apples to oranges? Compare the two groups: 4:6, read "four to six." (This is part-to-part.)

(b) Oranges to apples? Now the orange count comes first: 6:4. The order follows the words.

(c) Apples to all the fruit? The whole is 4 + 6 = 10 pieces, so apples to total is 4:10 (part-to-whole).

Order matters: 2:3 is not 3:2

A ratio is a comparison with a direction, so the order of the numbers carries meaning. 2:3 sugar-to-water makes a drink that is mostly water; flip it to 3:2 and you get a much sweeter drink. Always write the quantities in the same order as the words that describe them: "sugar to water" means the sugar number comes first.

🎮 Try itMix a ratio of sugar to water

Set the scoops of sugar and water. Watch the ratio appear in every form — "to", colon, the part-to-whole share, and the simplest form.

Sugar scoops 2
Water scoops 3
eastmath.com · 4.1 From Fractions to Ratios: Comparing Two Quantities · 4.1.1 What a ratio means