You cannot. When you divide two by ten the answer is 0.2, it cannot be 2.
-- Ignore the signs temporarily. -- Divide the numbers. -- The quotient is negative.
3.9
0.5416 The 6 is overlined.
The quotient of a number and 21 is the result obtained when you divide the number by 21. For example, if you divide 42 by 21, you get a quotient of 2. If you divide 63 by 21, you get a quotient of 3. And so on. The quotient can be an integer or a decimal number, depending on the numbers you’re dividing.
The decimal point moves to the left.
Because when you want to divide a decimal by a larger number, like 3 divided by 5, you need to add a zero to make the 3, 30, so you can divide, but then the quotient has to be a decimal because 5 does not go into 3 evenly
Divide 3 by 100. The quotient is 0.03 .
Divide as normal, but make sure to place the decimal point in the quotient directly above the decimal point in the dividend.
Exactly the way you would divide them if they were whole numbers and not decimals. The only extra trick to learn is how to decide where to put the decimal point in the quotient.
It moves to the left.
Not at all. The quotient of 1/3 doesn't end.
Divide the numerator of the rational number by its denominator. The quotient is the decimal equivalent.