Seven hundred five-thousandths written in standard notation is 0.14
Five and two hundred three hundred-thousandths written in standard form = 5.00203 × 100In standard notation = 5.00203
Four hundred seven thousandths in standard form is written 4.07 × 10-1
In "Scientific Notation" or "Standard Form" it is correctly written: 502.309 In Written From it is correctly written: Five hundred two and three hundred thousandths * * * * * No! In standard or scientific form it is 5.02309*10^2
Five and two hundred three ten-thousandths written in standard form is: 5.0203 × 100
Seven hundred five-thousandths written in standard notation is 0.14
Five and two hundred three hundred-thousandths written in standard form = 5.00203 × 100In standard notation = 5.00203
In standard form, 1 and 794 hundred-thousandths is written as: 1.000794 × 100
To write 21 hundred-thousandths in standard form, you first recognize that "hundred-thousandths" is equivalent to dividing by 100,000. Therefore, 21 hundred-thousandths is 21/100,000. In standard form, this would be written as 0.00021.
Standard form is the number written normally. Expanded form is the number written as a sum of each digit written as its place value. For example one thousand, two hundred and five, and eight hundred and three thousandths is written: Normal form: 1205.803 Expanded form: 1000 + 200 + 5 + 0.8 + 0.003
Four hundred seven thousandths in standard form is written 4.07 × 10-1
In "Scientific Notation" or "Standard Form" it is correctly written: 502.309 In Written From it is correctly written: Five hundred two and three hundred thousandths * * * * * No! In standard or scientific form it is 5.02309*10^2
Five and two hundred three ten-thousandths written in standard form is: 5.0203 × 100
Three hundred twenty-nine ten-thousandths is written as: "0.000329" in standard form.
Three hundred twelve thousandths (0.312) in standard form is written as: 3.12 × 10-1
0.407
Seven and seven hundred twelve thousandths would be written as 7.712The "and" tells you where the decimal goes, "thousandths" tells you how many places there will be in the decimal part of your answer (3 decimal places for thousandths), and seven hundred twelve tells you how many thousandths there will be.