The quotient is the number of times the second number goes intro the first and the remainder is what is left over.
Absolute value
When you divide by ten the decimal point moves one place to the left.
a decimal is part of a whole number e.g. 0.5 is half a whole numbera whole number is just a normal number e.g. 1, 2, 5, 8, 14, 56 etc. A whole number is on the left side of the dot and the decimal is on the right.Example: whole number decimal decimal number 43 . 684
An integer is a whole number so the answer is 4.
you can tell cause odd numbers have something left over
They comprise the integer part of the number.
This number, which is left after a whole number is divided equally, is usually called the remainder. This number can be written as a whole number (6 R1), as a fraction (1/2 if you were dividing by 2 to begin with), as well as a number of other ways.
The remainder.
The Quotient
It is the remainder that is sometimes left over but not always.
The whole number goes to the left of the decimal point.The whole number goes to the left of the decimal point.The whole number goes to the left of the decimal point.The whole number goes to the left of the decimal point.
Of course it is. Any number can be divided by another number (the result in this case is not an integer (whole number)) 753248 / 11 = 68477,0909... or 68477 1/11 (There is a remainder of 1) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Given the nature of the question the answer is no - assuming that the definition of divisible is that no remainder is left.
When you divide by ten the decimal point moves one place to the left.
218.6667
The answer depends on the level of mathematics you are at: from simple remainders left when one number is divided by another to the remainder theorem where is is the division of one polynomial by another.
A rational number is a number written in the form of one whole number over another whole number (not_zero); this is the form of a fraction. A fraction is the same as the numerator (top number) divided by the denominator (the bottom number). If the denominator is 1, then all that is left after the division is the whole number numerator, for example: 15/1 = 15 ÷ 1 = 15 All whole numbers are equivalent to fractions with a denominator of 1. All fractions are rational numbers. Thus all whole numbers are rational numbers.
You move the decimal point two spaces to the left. E.g: 23 divided by 100 equals 0.23.
It means, it is a number which can be divided evenly into the larger number, an even number of times. Example 2 divides into 6 , 3 times evenly, a nice whole number like 3 which is what we are looking for. Not something like 3 1/8 or 3 1/2 times this over hanging fraction like what was just stated 3.125 or 3.250 would not be a whole nice number. But with some left over portion of a number we don't desire. Its the .125 or .250 part that bug us.