The digit 8 represents eight thousands.
The 0, in the tens' place has a value of 0. The digit 1 is in the thousandths' place - a much smaller place value but, its value is 1 times a thousandth, which is bigger than 0.
The 1 - it is in the thousands' place.
127.869 In ones place is 7 In tenths place is 8 In tens place is 2
8
The place value of a digit is its face value multiplied by its place column value (1, 10, 100, etc). To have the same place value and face value, the place column value must be 1 - the units column (immediately before the decimal point). Thus it is the last digit of a whole number, which in this case is the '8'.
A 8 digit number does not have a place value - only a specific digit within it has.
the 8 would be at the ten-thousand place value
The digit 8 appears in the thousandths place in this number.
The 0, in the tens' place has a value of 0. The digit 1 is in the thousandths' place - a much smaller place value but, its value is 1 times a thousandth, which is bigger than 0.
The places are always the same no matter what the digits are. The value is obtained by multiplying the place times the digit. Starting from the right, the places in an 8-digit number are ones, tens, hundreds, thousands, ten thousands, hundred thousands, millions and ten millions.
It is in the hundreds place, so it is worth 800.
The 1 - it is in the thousands' place.
127.869 In ones place is 7 In tenths place is 8 In tens place is 2
8
8
If you mean: 8,832 then its value is two = 2
The digit 8 in 80007941 represents eight ten-millions.