You can make them have the same denominator and then compare


so as you can see,
Find the GCF of 80 and 32.
I'd start by identifying possible integer factors of both 80 and 32:
80: {1,2,4,5,8,10,16,20, 40, 80}
32: {1, 2,4, 8, 16, 32}
Working backwards, we see that the first factor that is represented in both lists is 16. Is 80 evenly divisible by 16? Yes; the quotient is 5.
Is 32 evenly divisible by 16? Yes; the quotient is 2.
You could writet 80 + 32 as 16(5 + 2). This is a product equal to 112, just as 80 + 32 = 112.
Answer:
the square root of 225 is 15.9