90.16
One hundred and ninety-four point seven194.7 x 1,000 = 194,700
one thousand, six hundred and fifty-four point nine one sixteen hundred and fifty-four point nine one sixteen hundred and fifty-four dollars and ninety-one cents (if say USA currency)
In words, 99999999.99 is read as "ninety-nine million nine hundred ninety-nine thousand nine hundred ninety-nine and ninety-nine hundredths." This representation follows the standard naming convention for numbers in the English language, where each group of three digits is read as a separate unit (thousands, millions, billions, etc.) and the decimal portion is expressed as a fraction of a whole number.
Sixteen point one five. One six point one five. Sixteen point fifteen. One six point fifteen. Sixteen and fifteen hundredths
Oh, dude, it's like sixteen point zero eight. You know, like, just write out the numbers and add "point" for the decimal. Easy peasy lemon squeezy.
Ninety-five point ninety-eight
That number is written two million seven hundred ninety-two thousand sixty-four. American English does not use "and" when writing out numbers except for numbers that follow a decimal point. For example, 792 is written seven hundred ninety-two, and not seven hundred and ninety-two, but 792.35 is written seven hundred ninety-two and thirty-five hundredths.
To write 0.092 in words, you would say "zero point zero nine two." This is because the zero before the decimal point indicates there are no whole numbers, the decimal point separates the whole numbers from the decimal numbers, and each digit after the decimal point is read individually.
Oh, dude, it's like writing out a check to your landlord, but with words instead of numbers. So, 4.16 in decimal word form would be "four point one six." It's like spelling out the numbers but with a little extra flair.
Sixteen and twenty-three hundredths. Most of us would say sixteen point twenty-three.
Thousands - Hundreds - Tens - One - Decimal - Tenth - Hundredth - Thousandth
2.96 in word form is 'Two point nine six'. NOT 'two point ninety six'. Reason. The nine is a tenth not a multiple of ten. and six is a hundredth, not a unit.