In Spanish math, the standard word is fracción (frahk-SYON), a feminine noun used for parts of a whole.
You’ll see “fraction” in worksheets, recipe problems, test questions, and daily chat about portions. Spanish keeps it simple: one main word covers almost each math use. The trick is writing the accent, saying the stress, and matching the grammar around it.
This page gives you the core translation, pronunciation that won’t trip you up, and the classroom phrases that show up again and again. You can copy the sentences into notes and use them today.
What ‘Fracción’ means in Spanish
Fracción means a part of something divided into equal parts. In math, it’s the same idea as English: a number written as one integer over another, like 3/4. Outside math, it can also mean a portion, like “a fraction of the group.” Context tells you which sense is meant, yet the word stays the same.
It’s feminine, so articles and adjectives match: la fracción, una fracción, esta fracción.
Spelling and accent marks
The written form is fracción with an accent on the last “o.” That accent shows stress on the final syllable: frac-CIÓN. If you drop the accent in formal writing, it reads as a different stress pattern and looks like a spelling error in school work.
Pronunciation you can trust
Say it in three beats: frak + syón. The “cc” sounds like “ks,” and the “ción” ending sounds like “syón.” In Spain, the “c” in ción can sound like “th” before “i” and “e,” so you may hear frahk-thyón. Both are accepted; stick with the one your teacher uses.
Saying ‘fraction’ in Spanish for math class and homework
In lessons, teachers use fracción as the umbrella word, then add adjectives to name the type. If you learn a few of those add-ons, your Spanish math talk starts sounding natural fast.
Gender, articles, and plural
- Singular: la fracción, una fracción
- Plural: las fracciones
- With a number: dos fracciones, tres fracciones
The plural ends in -es because the word ends in a consonant sound.
Reading a fraction out loud
Spanish has a clear pattern for reading many common fractions. You’ll often hear the numerator as a number, then the denominator as a special form.
- 1/2: un medio (also la mitad for “half” as a noun)
- 1/3: un tercio
- 1/4: un cuarto
- 3/4: tres cuartos
For many other denominators, Spanish uses the “-avos” ending: cinco octavos (5/8), siete décimos (7/10). On worksheets, you can also read fractions as “numerator over denominator” with sobre: tres sobre ocho.
Where ‘Fracción’ shows up outside math
Spanish speakers use fracción in daily talk when they mean “a small part” or “a slice of something.” You might hear it with time, money, or groups of people. This matters in school Spanish, since reading passages can use the word in a non-math way.
These patterns are common:
- una fracción de segundo (a fraction of a second)
- una fracción del precio (a fraction of the price)
- solo una fracción (only a fraction)
- una fracción mínima (a tiny fraction)
When the meaning is “portion,” Spanish also has other options like porción and parte. In a story or article, those words can fit better than fracción. In math class, fracción is still the safe pick. You’ll see it in readings, too.
Using it with measurements and recipes
In cooking math, you’ll often pair fractions with units. You can say media taza (half a cup), un cuarto de taza (a quarter cup), or tres cuartos de cucharadita (three quarters of a teaspoon). When the unit is feminine, medio changes to media: medio litro, media hora. If you see a recipe line like 1/2 cucharadita, reading it as media cucharadita sounds natural and keeps your Spanish smooth.
Core fraction vocabulary you’ll see on worksheets
The next list packs the terms that show up in word problems and instructions. Learn them once and you’ll decode pages of Spanish math with less effort.
Table 1. Fraction terms and how they’re used
| English term | Spanish term | How it appears in class |
|---|---|---|
| fraction | fracción | General label for any a/b form |
| numerator | numerador | Top number in a fraction |
| denominator | denominador | Bottom number in a fraction |
| proper fraction | fracción propia | Numerator is smaller than denominator |
| improper fraction | fracción impropia | Numerator is equal to or larger than denominator |
| mixed number | número mixto | Whole number plus a fraction |
| equivalent fractions | fracciones equivalentes | Same value, different numbers |
| simplify | simplificar | Reduce to lowest terms |
| common denominator | denominador común | Shared denominator for adding or subtracting |
| least common multiple | mínimo común múltiplo | Used to find a common denominator |
When you meet a new term, pair it with a small action. Say the word, point to the spot on the fraction, then say what it does. That habit makes the vocabulary stick.
Types of fractions in Spanish class
Teachers name fraction types with short adjective phrases. You don’t need a long list. Learn the common labels, and you’ll follow directions faster.
Proper and improper fractions
A fracción propia has a numerator that’s smaller than the denominator. It represents less than one whole. A fracción impropia has a numerator that’s equal to or larger than the denominator, so the value is one or more.
On paper, teachers may ask: Clasifica cada fracción como propia o impropia. That line shows up a lot.
Mixed numbers
A mixed number is número mixto. In Spanish classwork, you’ll often convert between a mixed number and an improper fraction:
- Convierte 2 1/3 en fracción impropia.
- Convierte 7/3 en número mixto.
When you say the mixed number out loud, many teachers read the whole number, then the fraction: dos y un tercio. Some classes prefer dos enteros y un tercio. Follow the pattern you hear in class.
Equivalent fractions and simplifying
Fracciones equivalentes share the same value even when the numbers look different. Simplificar means reducing to a form with smaller numbers. Spanish instructions often pair these ideas, since you can simplify by dividing the numerator and denominator by the same factor.
Watch for verbs like reduce, simplifica, encuentra, and comprueba. They signal the action the teacher wants, not just the topic.
Fractions, decimals, and percent
Word problems can move between forms. Decimal is decimal, and percent is porcentaje. You may see Escribe la fracción como decimal or Convierte a porcentaje.
How to Say ‘Fraction’ in Spanish in real sentences
Knowing the translation is step one. Step two is placing it in a sentence that matches how Spanish teachers speak and how textbooks are written. Below are patterns you can reuse with any numbers.
Common sentence frames
- Escribe la fracción ___. Write the fraction ___.
- Lee la fracción en voz alta. Read the fraction out loud.
- Encuentra el numerador y el denominador. Find the numerator and denominator.
- Compara estas fracciones. Compare these fractions.
- Ordena las fracciones de menor a mayor. Order the fractions from least to greatest.
Reading each fraction with “sobre” or with special words
If you’re speaking in class, sobre is the clear fallback. It matches the visual layout: top number over bottom number. Still, you’ll hear special denominator words in many classrooms, mainly for halves, thirds, and fourths. If you’re unsure, say it with sobre and keep going. Smooth speech often scores better than a long pause.
Table 2. Phrases that match common tasks
| Task | Spanish sentence | Plain English meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Identify parts | El numerador está arriba y el denominador abajo. | Top is numerator, bottom is denominator |
| Simplify | Simplifica la fracción dividiendo por el mismo número. | Reduce by dividing both parts by the same number |
| Find equivalence | Estas fracciones son equivalentes. | These fractions have the same value |
| Add | Suma las fracciones con denominador común. | Add fractions that share a denominator |
| Subtract | Resta las fracciones y simplifica el resultado. | Subtract and then reduce the answer |
| Compare | ¿Cuál fracción es mayor? | Which fraction is larger? |
| Convert | Convierte la fracción impropia en número mixto. | Turn an improper fraction into a mixed number |
| Explain | Explica tu respuesta con un dibujo. | Show your answer with a drawing |
Mistakes that trip up English speakers
Most slip-ups are small, yet they can cost points on a quiz. Fix these early and your written Spanish looks clean.
Leaving off the accent
Write fracción, not fraccion. If you type without accents, set up a shortcut on your phone or computer. In handwriting, make the accent a quick diagonal line. It takes a split second.
Mixing up “half” words
Un medio is “one half” as a fraction. La mitad is “the half” as a thing. Both show up, so pick the one that matches your sentence. If there’s an article like la, mitad often fits.
Using the wrong plural
The plural is fracciones. Don’t write fraccións. Spanish doesn’t add just “s” here.
Reading all fractions with “sobre”
Sobre works and is clear, yet teachers also expect tercio, cuarto, and décimo forms. Learn the common ones first, then fall back on sobre when the denominator is awkward.
Mini practice you can do in five minutes
Grab a notebook page, do this routine. It’s short, but it hits spelling, speaking, and meaning in one go.
- Write fracción five times with the accent.
- Say it out loud five times, stressing -ción.
- Write 1/2, 1/3, 3/4, 7/10, 5/8.
- Read each one using the special denominator word when you know it; use sobre for the rest.
Quick checklist for notes and tests
This is the section you can copy into your study sheet. If you can run through these points, you’re ready for most fraction questions in Spanish.
- I can spell fracción with the accent.
- I can say it with stress on the last syllable.
- I match gender: la fracción, las fracciones.
- I know numerador and denominador on sight.
- I can read 1/2, 1/3, 1/4, 3/4 out loud.
- I can name fracción propia and fracción impropia.
- I can write one sentence that uses simplificar.
One last recap in plain words
Write fracción, stress -ción, and match feminine grammar.