hundredths are smaller than tenths because on a grid tenths is bigger than hundredths
One column in a hundredths grid has 10/100's in it One column in a tenths grid has 1/10 in it. You can tell that 10/100=1/10 by looking at the two visuals.
There cannot be a sensible answer because the proposition is false.
It depends on the scale you choose for your axes. If the major grid lines are at single integers (1, 2, 3...) then 0.4 would be 4 tenths of the way from the origin to the No.1 grid-line. If though you made every tenth grid-line = 1 then 0.4 would be the 4th grid-line.
Count the number of squares across the top of the grid, the count the number of squares down the side of the grid. Then multiply these two numbers If you have a grid of 100 squares by 60 squares then the number of squares in the grid is 100x60 = 6000
Grid? That's where power routed to multiple locations.
Enlarging: When you are enlarging shapes you make it bigger than its normal size but if you were given a grid and your shape or picture was given a gird and if the grids has the same number of squares but the squares in the other gird are bigger, you just need to check the coordinates from your original shape in the grid and draw the other shape in the other gird with the same coordinates. Reducing: You just reduce (make it smaller) the size of the shape but if you were given a grid and your shape or picture was given a gird and if the grids has the same number of squares but the squares in the other gird are smaller, you just need to check the coordinates from your original shape in the grid and draw the other shape in the other gird with the same coordinates. g3
The cowboy girded the herd with his trusty lasso
1.65- 98 using a hundreds grid = -96.35
on a hundredths grid 7 hundredths is 7; but seven tenths is 0.7 which is 70 hundredths. So 7 tenths would be 70 on the hundredts grid, separating it from 7 hundredths
Rotation, in the plane of the grid, through 180 degrees.
hundredths are smaller than tenths because on a grid tenths is bigger than hundredths
One column in a hundredths grid has 10/100's in it One column in a tenths grid has 1/10 in it. You can tell that 10/100=1/10 by looking at the two visuals.
One column in a hundredths grid has 10/100's in it One column in a tenths grid has 1/10 in it. You can tell that 10/100=1/10 by looking at the two visuals.
It is equal because one column in a hundredths grid has 10 hundredths in i and one column in a tenths grid has 1 tenth.You can tell that they are both equal by looking a both at them.10 hundredths = 1 tenth.
If the grid is 10 by 10 or 100 squares, then 2/10 would be 20 squares.
Well it's not really a grid it's lines of longitude and latitude so you can find the coordinates of whatever.