47.5% as a decimal is 0.475 which can't be expressed as a mixed number because it is less than 1
To round the number 1.46 to the nearest whole number, you look at the digit immediately to the right of the decimal point, which is 4 in this case. Since 4 is less than 5, you simply drop the decimal part and keep the whole number part as is. Therefore, rounding 1.46 to the nearest whole number results in 1.
1st odd number . . . 1 (1 less than double 1)2nd odd number . . . 3 (1 less than double 2)3rd odd number . . . 5 (1 less than double 3)4th odd number . . . 7 (1 less than double 4)5th odd number . . . 9 (1 less than double 5)Are you seeing a pattern yet ?6th odd number . . . 11 (1 less than double 6)7th odd number . . . 13 (1 less than double 7)...Qth odd number . . . . (1 less than double Q)
There are infinitely many decimal numbers which are less than 1.4.For a start, 1, 0, -1, -2 ... are all decimal numbers which are less than 1.4 1.39, 1.399, 1.3999, 1.39999. ... are all smaller and you can have infinitely many 9s in that sequence of numbers.
The way you round numbers is to look at the number immediately to the right of the place you want to round. In this case, you're looking at the number 4 because that is the next number after the first decimal place. If that number is 5 or greater, you round up to the next number; if it is less than 5 you stay the same. 4 is less than five so you leave the number 1 as a 1 and have 3.1 hours.
all of them
Not necessarily.0.5 < 1 < 1.5 So, the whole number 1 is more than the decimal fraction 0.5 but less than the decimal fraction 1.5 but the decimal fraction 0.5 is less than the whole number 1 while the decimal fraction 1.5 is more than the whole number 1.
decimal point to the left of the whole number. Example: 1= whole number. Less than 1 as a decimal is .00, .01, 02 etc.
Any number less than ' 1 '.
You may or you may not. If you divided by a decimal number that is greater than 1 then you will get a smaller number whereas if you divide by a number less than 1 then you will get a larger number.
To find a decimal number greater than 1 but less than 10 that adds up to 16, you can use the following approach: Start with the number 1.00 (since it's greater than 1 but less than 10). Add 15 to it. So, 1.00 + 15.00 = 16.00. Therefore, the decimal number you're looking for is 16.00. It's greater than 1 but less than 10 and adds up to 16.
When multiplying decimals less than 1, the answer gets smaller because each decimal is less than 1. Multiplying a number by a value less than 1 will always result in a smaller product. Think of it as taking a fraction or a portion of the number, which will inevitably make the product smaller.
Dividing a number by a decimal always gives a number greater than the dividend. Some decimal numbers are bigger than 1, eg 506.23 , so the answer is less. The statement "a number greater than you" has no meaning so the question cannot be properly understood.
1
Yes. -5 × 0.5 = -1 -1 is greater than -5.
0.06 is a decimal number. Also, since its magnitude is less than 1, there is no sensible way of representing it as a mixed number.
The long division abstract method works with any number, including numbers that are less than one. The answer will also be a decimal, or if the number is a negative number, than the answer, or quotient will also be negative.