No.
In the number 76085493, the digit 6 has the same place value and face value. Both its place value and face value are 6, as it is in the millions place. No other digit in this number shares this characteristic.
The number 1. 1 in the one's place equals 1.
By itself, it has a value of nothing - which is NOT the same as it has no value. When in a string of digits it is a place holder. For example, 105 is not the same as 15 because the 0 in the first number tells you that the 1 is in the hundreds' place and not the tens' place as it is in the second number.
A number cannot have a place value - only a specific digit with a number can have a place value.A number cannot have a place value - only a specific digit with a number can have a place value.A number cannot have a place value - only a specific digit with a number can have a place value.A number cannot have a place value - only a specific digit with a number can have a place value.
Oneths are the same as Ones so it is not on the number line
A number cannot have a place value: only a single digit in a number has a place value.
The digit in a place value is the same as the digit in the place 1000 times greater if both places represent the same digit in a number. For example, in the number 5,678, the digit '5' in the thousands place is the same as the digit '5' in the 5,000s place. However, in most numbers, this will not hold true, as each place value typically has a different digit.
A whole number does not have a place value: only a single digit in a number has a place value - a different place value for each digit.
place value and face value of a number are always equal at ones place.
A number cannot have a place value. Place value is a characteristic of a single digit within a number.
A single digit (in a number) can have a place value. A whole number cannot have a place value!
place value