Rounding to the nearest Thousandths:
When you have a decimal point and numbers after. the first number after is a tenth
Like 2.3, the 3 is a tenth, the second number after is a hundredth, 2.34 and the third number after is the Thousandths, 2.348. If there are numbers after this then you would round that number up or down, 5-9 up and 0 - 4 down and add it to the thousandths number. for example. 2.3486 would be rounded to 2.349 and 2.3484 would be rounded to 2.348
There is no rounding needed as it is in the thousandth place already.
two answers 3.034 rounding down 3.035 rounding up as 5 is in the middle
Rounding to the nearest thousandth mean to round the number to the third place to the right of the decimal point. For example: 587.397431 is 587.397 rounded to the nearest thousandth.
26.937
Yes, if you're rounding to the nearest hundred, ten or one. No, if you're rounding to the nearest tenth, hundredth or thousandth.
5,125
There is no rounding needed as it is in the thousandth place already.
The number, 2.166, is expressed to the thousandth so there is no rounding to the thousandth.
1572 is an integer and so is not changed by rounding to a thousandth.
4.781
two answers 3.034 rounding down 3.035 rounding up as 5 is in the middle
Rounding to the nearest thousandth mean to round the number to the third place to the right of the decimal point. For example: 587.397431 is 587.397 rounded to the nearest thousandth.
21.749
26.937
If you are rounding to the nearest thousandth, and there's no decimal, the answer stays the same.
Yes, if you're rounding to the nearest hundred, ten or one. No, if you're rounding to the nearest tenth, hundredth or thousandth.
This all depends on what you are rounding this number to. If you are rounding it to the nearest whole number it would be: 19. If you are rounding it to the nearest tens place it would be 20.