.9
Not necessarily.
Compare the first digit after the decimal point. Which is less?
-0.999
Any decimal that starts 2.07 and the next digit (thousandths) is 0-4, and if the thousandths digit is 0, is followed by a non-zero digit at some stage. eg 2.07000000000000000000000000000000000001, 2.074999999999999999, 2.074 are all greater than 2.07 and less than 2.075
It is 0.06 when rounded to two decimal places because the digit 1 is less than 5
Not necessarily.
Compare the first digit after the decimal point. Which is less?
How about: 0.001 or 0.01
-0.999
4.832 rounded to two decimal places is 4.83 because the digit of 2 is less than the digit of 5
If the last digit in 7.37 is less than 5, then remove the last digit. One Decimal Place Rule #2: If the last digit in 7.37 is 5 or more and the second to the last digit in 7.37 is less than 9, then remove the last digit and add 1 to the second to the last digit.
Any decimal that starts 2.07 and the next digit (thousandths) is 0-4, and if the thousandths digit is 0, is followed by a non-zero digit at some stage. eg 2.07000000000000000000000000000000000001, 2.074999999999999999, 2.074 are all greater than 2.07 and less than 2.075
No. A decimal number is simply a way of representing a number in such a way that the place value of each digit is ten times that of the digit to its right. A decimal representation does not require a decimal point. It can be greater than, equal to or less than 1.
Yes, 0.2 is less than 0.9. In decimal notation, the value of a digit is determined by its position relative to the decimal point. The further to the right a digit is, the smaller its value. In this case, 0.2 has a smaller value than 0.9 because the 2 is in a smaller decimal place than the 9.
It is: 4.47 because the digit 2 is less than 54.47
the digit before the decimal point in decimal notation, representing an integer less than ten.
It is 0.99 to two decimal places because the digit 3 is less than 5