How can you describe a rational number as a quotient when the divisor is not zero?(1 point)

Responses

All numbers are rational numbers.
All numbers are rational numbers.

A rational number is a fraction that includes all integers except for when zero is the divisor.
A rational number is a fraction that includes all integers except for when zero is the divisor.

A rational number is a fraction that includes all integers.
A rational number is a fraction that includes all integers.

A rational number is a fraction.
A rational number is a fraction.

1 answer

The best description from the given responses is:

"A rational number is a fraction that includes all integers except for when zero is the divisor."

This statement correctly defines a rational number as being expressible as a fraction where the numerator is an integer and the denominator is a non-zero integer.