Want this question answered?
The answer will depend on the degree of rounding. To the nearest ten, it is 39120 To the nearest million, it is 0.
five million, sixty-nine thousand, one hundred and four
That depends on whether the numbers are rounded to the nearest tenth, the nearest whole number, the nearest ten, the nearest hundred, or the nearest thousand. Each choice produces a different answer.
If you mean WHAT is 12.5 million in numbers the answer is 12,500,000
All numbers can be rounded to the nearest ten.
And the following numbers would be...
33,500,000 to 34,499,999
9000 to the nearest thousand, 10000 to the nearest ten thousands and 0 to the nearest million.
You will lose most of the information if you are working mainly with numbers smaller that 500,000. But in that case you should not be rounding to the nearest million but to a lesser degree.
3135 to the nearest hundred is 3100
The answer will depend on the degree of rounding. To the nearest ten, it is 39120 To the nearest million, it is 0.
Integers ending in a string of zeros are ambiguous. You cannot tell whether this number is accurate to the nearest hundred million (1 significant figure), to the nearest million (3 sf) or even the nearest unit (9 sf).
It is 5 499 999.999 ... (repeating)
134.7 - 45.5 - 67.9 = 21.3
8450000001 8499999999 8450000002 8498888888 84978963451 84500000003
To round 306.25 to the nearest whole number, you would look at the digit immediately to the right of the decimal point, which is 2. Since 2 is less than 5, you would simply drop the decimal part and keep the whole number as it is, resulting in 306. To round to the nearest tenth, you would look at the digit in the tenths place, which is 5. Since 5 is equal to or greater than 5, you would round up the whole number to 306.3.
five million, sixty-nine thousand, one hundred and four