It's important to estimate before finding the real answer for any numerical problem in arithmetic or any other kind of math, so that when you think you have the real answer, you can immediately recognize whether it's total baloney or has a chance of being correct.
No.
overestimate
29.270000000000003
10.5256
It is not particularly important.
A formula.
Estimate 4883 by 7 and the division problem solved we get 697.57.
when both factors in a multiplication problem are rounded up to estimate the product, the estimate is an overestimate.
It's important to estimate before finding the real answer for any numerical problem in arithmetic or any other kind of math, so that when you think you have the real answer, you can immediately recognize whether it's total baloney or has a chance of being correct.
The answer would be an overestimate.
That's an overestimate.
No.
When you round both factors in a multiplication problem up, your estimate will be greater than the actual product.
You would call that an estimate, or overestimate.
overestimate
It basically means that you round it up and down. For example 593- 158. For the low estimate the problem would look like this 590-150. For the high estimate the problem would look like this 600-160.