Yes.
One such example 0.12 + 0.38 = 0.5
No. 6 tenths is only 60 hundredths.
Well, isn't that a happy little question! In 4.7 tenths, there are 47 hundredths. You see, each whole number is made up of ten tenths, and each tenth is made up of ten hundredths. So, 4.7 tenths is equal to 47 hundredths. Just remember, there are no mistakes, only happy little accidents!
Look at the hundredths place only. If it is 5 or more round up, add one to the tenths place, and throw away the hundredths and all decimal parts to the right of it. If the hundredths place is less than 5 round down, which means keep the tenths place the same and throw away the hundredths and all decimal parts to the right of it. Ex: 65.734 ... 3 is the hundredths place and is less than 5 ... round down = 65.7 or 74.38111 --- 8 is the hundredths place and is greater than 5 ... round up = 74.4
78/100. 0.78 is 78th of a hundred. the names of the columns to the right of the decimal are: tenths, hundredths, thousandths, etc... since the number 78 only takes up 2 columns and ends in the hundredths column, it's out of 100.
-- To get tenths, you chop one thing up into 10 pieces. -- To get hundredths, you chop one thing up into 100 pieces. Naturally they have to be smaller than when you only chopped it into 10.
You only show one decimal place, the tenths place. 0.tenths, hundredths, thousandths is how the order goes. The first decimals place is the tenths place. What number is in that place? The 2, so your answer is 2.2.
No. 6 tenths is only 60 hundredths.
.16 the 1 is in the tenths place and the 6 is in the hundredths place. So, it's 16 hundredths.
Well, isn't that a happy little question! In 4.7 tenths, there are 47 hundredths. You see, each whole number is made up of ten tenths, and each tenth is made up of ten hundredths. So, 4.7 tenths is equal to 47 hundredths. Just remember, there are no mistakes, only happy little accidents!
you write it as 2.3
Look at the hundredths place only. If it is 5 or more round up, add one to the tenths place, and throw away the hundredths and all decimal parts to the right of it. If the hundredths place is less than 5 round down, which means keep the tenths place the same and throw away the hundredths and all decimal parts to the right of it. Ex: 65.734 ... 3 is the hundredths place and is less than 5 ... round down = 65.7 or 74.38111 --- 8 is the hundredths place and is greater than 5 ... round up = 74.4
1.09 is actually bigger because it is 1 and 9 hundredths but 1.9 is only i 9 tenths... and hundredths are bigger than tenths
Decimals are used to describe parts of a number, something in between two whole numbers. Tenths, halves, eights etc. But 108 is only whole numbers, so there's nothing there to use a decimal for.
78/100. 0.78 is 78th of a hundred. the names of the columns to the right of the decimal are: tenths, hundredths, thousandths, etc... since the number 78 only takes up 2 columns and ends in the hundredths column, it's out of 100.
The decimal point is the only period (full-stop) used in decimals.
The only equivalent decimal is 76.999... repeating.
The number 0.2 is equal to two tenths or twenty hundredths. The number 0.020 is equal to only two hundredths.