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The first one is in tens place and the second is in tenths place.
The '9' is in the "first decimal" place and the '3' is in the "second decimal" place.Rules for roundingIf the number in the second decimal place is 5 or greater then the number in the first decimal place is rounded upwards by 1.If the number in the second decimal place is 4 or less then the number in the first decimal place is left unchanged.As the problem in this case is 3.93 and the number in the second decimal place is less than 5, we end up with3.9 "correct to one decimal place" or "rounded to one decimal place".
100
The first one is in hundred millions place. The second one is in ten thousands place.
The first and second places to the left of the decimal point respectively.
If you "over take" a person in any position/place, you obviously finish in that person's position/place. You finish in Second.
The teams that finish in first place and in second place in Group A.
In horse racing, the horse must finish in the top two, or three, or four of a particular event. If the selection you have placed a bet on is among those places, you will win. As a general rule, in larger races, a horse must finish in the top three but in smaller races, the selection may need to finish in second, or even first, place. To learn more about betting, please follow the Betfair link below.
At 100cc finish the retro grand prix in first or second place.
There wouldn't exactly be a third place if the first two tie. I guess the third person to finish would be considered second place and the first two would both be first place. Hope this helped!
yes
They finished in third place with 75 points. In first place was Arsenal with 90 points and second was Chelsea with 85 points.
yes if you cross finish line
Tony Stewart earned $300,308 for his second place finish at Las Vegas Motor Speedway on March 6, 2011.
Bobby Allison won the 1988 Daytona 500, with his son, Davey, finishing in second place. The race was held at the Daytona International Speedway.
The first-place finisher can be any one of the 9 skiers. For each of these choices, the second-place finisher can be any one of the remaining 8 skiers. For each of these choices, the third-place finisher can be any one of the remaining 7 skiers. So there are (9 x 8 x 7) = 504 ways in which the first, second, and third places can be comprised of members of the group of nine skiers.
Second. You WERE 3rd, passed the person in 2nd, giving you 2nd place. There is still someone ahead of you.