Three and four hundred fifty-three thousandths.
I read it was used in Germany around 1612.
0.2415 is read as " zero point two four one five". This is so because after decimal point, we read the individual numbers, not the number as a whole.
0.608 is read as zero point six zero eight.
No. It is read as "zero point three" or "point three"
1.3 is read as 'one point three'.
point two tenths
2.02 is read as two point zero two.
I read it was used in Germany around 1612.
0.608 is read as zero point six zero eight.
0.2415 is read as " zero point two four one five". This is so because after decimal point, we read the individual numbers, not the number as a whole.
No. It is read as "zero point three" or "point three"
0.110 is read as "ten thousandths".
1.3 is read as 'one point three'.
twelve hundredths
the decimal point
.54 is bigger than .51. When you read a decimal, you read it from left to right, the biggest decimal number being the one closest to the decimal point.
To convert a number to standard form: write out the number starting with the first non-zero digit and continue until the last non-zero digit; put the decimal point after the first digit (if there is only 1 digit, the decimal point does not need to be written); count how many digits the decimal point needs to move to get back to where it was originally (if there was no decimal point as the number was a whole number it was "hiding" after the ones-digit, the last digit); if the decimal point needs to move left make this count negative; write ×10 to the power of this count after the number written in step 2. For 0.007 this gives 7 × 10⁻³