It is: 3 which represents 300
There are 40 possible answers. There can be any digit in the tens place. The digit in the hundreds place must be 6 more than the one in the units place.
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.
200,000. Since the number 200 is in the hundreds, it will be 3 digits long. A number in the thousands has at least 4 digits, and up to 6. The number one thousand is written like this: 1,000. Putting the number 1 in the thousands requires adding 3 zeros to the end of it, so writing the number 200 in the thousands would require the same strategy. Therefore, you'd get to your answer: 200,000.
A single digit in a number can have a place value. A number with several digits cannot.
0 or 5
If the number formed by the last three digits is divisible by 8. This requires that: if the digit in the hundreds place is even, the last two digits must form a number divisible by 8 and if the digit in the hundreds place is odd, the last two digits must form a number divisible by 4 but not by 8.
415
None, the digits are the same.
4
161226
38977 is in ones place9 is in tens place (and is three times the number in thousands place)8 is in the hundreds place3 is in the thousands place7+9+8+3=27
240 is three digits, and has a '2' in the hundreds column. 240/3 = 80 240/4 = 60 240/5 = 48
The name of such a number is a decimal number. The digits after the decimal point represent tenths, hundredths, thousandths, and so on.
There are six hundreds in 600 because there are 6 digits in the hundreds place.
The hundreds place !
Four.
A decimal (ex. 0.2) can have any amount of digits after the decimal (ex. 0.222222334) Think about the tens, hundreds, thousands places. A number in the tens place has two digits. A number in the hundreds place has three digits, and thousands has three. However, the tenths (NOT tens) place is written after a decimal with one digit after it. (ex. 0.1) Hundredthshas two digits after the decimal, and so on. An easy way to remember how many digits are after the decimal is to think of the base number in the tenths place, the so called "base" word is ten, and the number 10 has one zero, so in the tenths place there is one digit after the decimal. In the hundredths place, the base word is hundred, and there are two zeros after the hundreds, so a number in the hundredths place has to have two zeros after the decimal, and so on.Helpful Hint: The number after the decimal can be any number, except you cannot end a decimal with a zero if you are writing something in a place smaller than that (if this doesn't really make sense, read the example following). A number in the hundredths place - 0.02 or 0.42 A number in the thousandths place - 0.002, 0.426, 0.411, 0.053 NOT - A number in the thousandths place - 0.030 This is actually 0.03, so it is in the hundreds place. A zero after the last number greater than 0 doesn't have a value!Hope this helps!