00539 Leading zeros are shown since the editor I am using suppresses SPACE's
00047 Leading zeros are shown since the editor I am using suppresses SPACE's
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03773 Mul 539 by 7
21560 Mul 539 by 4 but are multiplying by the 10's pos, hence the 0 in the 1's pos
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25333
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Multiply the three-digit number by the one's digit, or last digit, of the two-digit number. That is your first part. Now multiply by the second-to-last digit, or ten's digit, and multiply the result by 10. That is your second part. Add the two parts and that is your answer.
To multiply two digit numbers, multiply each place value of a factor by each place value digit and add the results.
52,355,500 is an eight-digit number.
To multiply by a two-digit number, you can use the distributive property. Break the two-digit number into its tens and ones components. For example, to multiply 34 by 12, you can calculate (30 + 4) × (10 + 2). Then, multiply each part: 30 × 10, 30 × 2, 4 × 10, and 4 × 2, and finally add all the results together to get the final product.
A three-digit dividend is a number between 100 and 999, while a two-digit divisor is a number between 10 and 99. A two-digit quotient results from dividing the three-digit dividend by the two-digit divisor. For example, if you divide 256 (dividend) by 16 (divisor), the quotient is 16, which is a two-digit number.
The two 2-digit numbers that multiply to make 176 are 11 and 16. When you multiply 11 by 16, you get 176 (11 × 16 = 176). These are the only two-digit integers that satisfy this condition.
To multiply two digit decimal numbers, multiply the numbers as you would without the decimals. To put the decimal in the answer, count the number of decimal places in the two numbers and put the decimal in the answer that many places to the left. For example: 5.12 x 6.35 = 32.5120. If the numbers were 51.2 x 63.5, the answer would be 3251.20.
Practice!
Here are two examples
find the diagonal method of two digit number and three digit number
2*10=20
You multiply straight across. Let's take one half and two halves for example. Multiply across, and you get three quarters.