It is 46.
Although many schools teach you to round 5 up, always rounding up from 5 is inappropriate because it introduces an upward bias. The IEEE (Institute of Electronic and Electrical Engineers) standard 754 is to round 5 up or down so that the new last digit is even. See link for more: //en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rounding#Round_half_to_even
When rounding to the nearest 10,000 , all whole numbersfrom 5,000 to 10,499 round to 10,000 .
It depends what you are rounding to. If rounding to the nearest whole number, it would be 41. If rounding to the nearest tenth, it would not change. If you were rounding to the nearest ten, it would be 40.
That would depend on what you were rounding it to. If rounding to the nearest whole number, then it does not need rounding. If rounding to the nearest ten, it would be 420. If rounding to the nearest hundred, it would be 400.
To the nearest whole number, 23
If you are rounding to the nearest whole number, 29.35 would round down to 29. If you are rounding to the nearest 5 or the nearest 10, it would round up to 30.
15
Rounding to the nearest thousand, 50 rounds to zero.
The smallest that will round up is 650. The smallest that will round down is 701.
4500 if rounding to the nearest thousand.
250
The largest number that round to 0 when when rounding to the nearest hundred (100) is 49.The smallest would be 1 if we consider whole numbers only.
795The range of numbers that round to 800 when rounding to the nearest ten is 795 - 804
It depends on whether you are rounding to the nearest integer, nearest ten, nearest 50, nearest 100 or something else.
0.45 if you are rounding to the nearest tenths. 0.495 if you are rounding to the nearest hundredths. It's hard to tell if you are asking for the smallest hundredths decimal or if you are wanting to round to the nearest hundredths.
982,400 is 982404 rounded to the nearest rounding number.
When rounding to the nearest 10,000 , all whole numbersfrom 5,000 to 10,499 round to 10,000 .
55 and 65 if rounding to the nearest 10. 59.5 and 60.5 is to the nearest unit.