It is 0.61
.16 the 1 is in the tenths place and the 6 is in the hundredths place. So, it's 16 hundredths.
1
3 5/10 is 3.5 1 2 3 . 4 5 6789 hundreds tens ones decimal point tenths hundredths ..........
decimal form of 10 tenths = 1.010 tenths in decimal = 1
One Tenth (1/10) = .1Forty Tenths (40/10) = 4 (or, if you impose, 4.0)
.31 3 is in the the tenths and 1 is in the hundredths.
1.7 > 1.07 1.7 = 1 and 7 tenths 1.07 = 1 and 7 hundredths 1 tenth = 10 hundredths 7 tenths = 70 hundredths > 7 hundredths.
5.31 The 3 is in the tenths decimal place, the 1 is in the hundredths decimal place. That makes 31 hundredths.
.16 the 1 is in the tenths place and the 6 is in the hundredths place. So, it's 16 hundredths.
4/100 = 0.04 In the decimal columns ; #1 column is tenths #2 column is hundredths #3 column is thousandths et.seq. Notice the use of '--ths'.
1 and 8 tenths as a decimal is 1.8
1 and 18 hundredths = 1.18 in decimal
tenths. one tenth = 1/10 = .1 one hundredth = 1/100 = .01
.61
1
It is 0.1
12.14 The whole-number part, 12, is the part left of the decimal point. The position first right of the decimal point is the tenths place; the position second right of the decimal point is the hundredths place. We can't write "14" in the single-column hundredths place. And in fact, 10 hundredths (10/100) is the same as one tenth (1/10), so we can write a "1" in the first position right of the decimal point to stand for the ten-hundredths portion of fourteen hundredths (10 of the 14 hundredths). And the remaining four hundredths (4/100) are indicated by the 4 in the hundredths place.