No, for example 10/100 is 0.1
Oh, dude, if there's a zero in the ones place of a quotient, it means the remainder is zero. But hey, don't get too excited, like, it's not a party or anything. It just means the division worked out nice and tidy.
If you mean 18.88 divided by 4 then the quotient is 4.72 and the first digit of 4 is in the ones or units place
Divide the number by 5, and the remainder in that division is the 'ones' (50) digit. Take that quotient (without the remainder) and divide by 5. The remainder is the 'fives' (51) digit. Continue dividing until you have zero, with a remainder and that will be the leftmost digit. Example 27 (base ten) to base 5: 27 / 5 = 5, remainder 2 5 / 5 = 1, remainder 0 1 / 5 = 0, remainder 1 so 102 (base 5) is the same as 27 (base 10). You can check: 1 is in the (52=25) place, and the 2 is in the 'ones' place. So (1*25) + (0*5) + (2*1) = 27
its evenly divisible by 5 with no remainder
18.88/4 = 4.72 and the first digit is in the ones place
0.012
The place where the number is in.Example: Which place value is two in?542Answer: ones
i mean ones,tens,hundreds or thousands
The nine is in the ones place.
A Networking Quotient is a measurement of ones Social Networking Skills. Thom Singer created this in conjunction with his books on the subject; you can measure yours at www.networkingquotient.com
CAReful 4.89 to the 'ONES' place. Do you mean to one place(units) or one decimal place (tenths). 4.89 ~ 5 ( to One UNITS place) 4.89 ~ 4.9 ( to one DECIMAL place)
4 x 1 = 4 (4 / 1 = 4) 4 x 10 = 40 (40 / 4 = 10) Since 18.88 is between 4 and 40, you can conclude that the quotient must be between 1 and 10.