0.22
Assuming that the "sixty" in the question refers to a whole number, and the "four-hundreths" as part of a whole, then the answer would be 60.04.In the decimal system, the first digit to the right of the decimal point refers to tenths of a whole. The second digit refers to hundreths of a whole, the third to thousandths of a whole, and so on.
The tenths place in 34.1 is .1; the tenths place is the first number to the right of the decimal.
Tenths is the first place to the right of the decimal point. Hundredths is the second place to the right of the decimal point.
The tenths is the first place to the right of the decimal point.
The tenths place in 30.312 is in bold (3). The tenths place is the first digit to the right of the decimal point.
Well, 2 units, right? So if you split it in tenths each you get twenty tenths...right?
Assuming that the "sixty" in the question refers to a whole number, and the "four-hundreths" as part of a whole, then the answer would be 60.04.In the decimal system, the first digit to the right of the decimal point refers to tenths of a whole. The second digit refers to hundreths of a whole, the third to thousandths of a whole, and so on.
6,000,406.6
No, same number. When a number is to the RIGHT of the decimal point, you could add zeros to the right side and not change the value. Two tenths and twenty hundredths are the same.
The answer will depend on what is wrong with the number.
The first numeral to the right of the decimal is the tenths' place.
The tenths place in 34.1 is .1; the tenths place is the first number to the right of the decimal.
tenths on right side of decimal, hundreds on the other
forty tenths yes thats right
Tenths is the first place to the right of the decimal point. Hundredths is the second place to the right of the decimal point.
The tenths is the first place to the right of the decimal point.
The tenths place. Tenths place is the first one to the right of the decimal. Then hundredths, thousandths, etc.