Thirty-seven and twenty-five thousandths.
First, look at the place of the last digit. Using 0.35 as an example, the last digit (5) is in the hundredths place. This number place, minus the -ths ending, becomes the number in the denominator. For the example, 100 would be the denominator (hundredths - ths = hundred = 100). For the numerator, simply use the number behind the decimal point. In this case, 35. So your fraction would be 35/100. However, after you put it in fraction form, make sure you reduce the fraction as much as possible. Thus, 35/100 becomes 7/20 for the final answer.
See the table is here::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::; Hundreds :::::::Tens:::::::::Ones:::::::::Tenths::::::::hundredths:::::::thousandths You write it as : 678.09 You multiply the 66 by ten and 18 by One and 9 is divided by 100. Then all are added up.
To write 0.72 in word form, you would say "zero point seven two." This indicates that there are no whole numbers, but there are seven tenths and two hundredths. This is a way to verbally represent the decimal number 0.72.
400
6.86
5.12
five ten-thousandths, five hundred-thousandths, five millionths... just keep adding "ths" to the end.
sixty five hundred thousandths. its just like counting normally to the left of the decimal (ten, hundred, thousand, ten thousand, hundred thousand, etc.) except you replace the end with "ths" (tenths, hundredths, thousandths, etc.).
4/100 = 0.04 In the decimal columns ; #1 column is tenths #2 column is hundredths #3 column is thousandths et.seq. Notice the use of '--ths'.
56.35 '5' is the TENS digit '6' is the UNITS Decimal point '3' is the TENTHS '5' is the HUNDREDTHS NB For the Decimal digits note that the suffix is '---ths'.
0.875
tenths, hundredths, thousandths, ten thousandths (etc.) (just add a 'ths' to the end of the number.)
11/8 = 1.375
45.86 ''4' is in the 'tens' column '5' is in the 'units' column '5' is in the 'TENTHS' column '6' is in the 'HUNDREDTHS' column NB Note the use of '-ths' for the decimal digits.
3 and 7 10 ths as a decimal is 3.7.
It goes either: upward: ones, tens, hundreds, thousands, ten-thousands, hundred-thousands, millions, ten-millions, hundred-millions, billions, ten-billions, hundred-billions, trillions, ten-trillions, hundred-trillions, quadrillions, ten-quadrillions, hundred-quadrillions, etc. downward: ones, tenths, hundredths, thousandths, etc. like upwards but starting at tenths and decimal places. Mainly it will just be a "ths" instead of a "s"