Wiki User
∙ 14y agoIf 43 is one-tenth of the answer, then the answer is 430. If you divide 430 by 2, the original number was 215.
Wiki User
∙ 14y agoI think it would be .4160 but you will have to double check!
A tenth of a number deals with decimals. The way to think about a tenth is that 1/10 is one tenth, and 1/10 as a decimal is 0.1. therefore the first decimal place is always the tenth of a number, so to answer your question the nearest tenth of 15.58 would be 15.6.
To find one tenth of a number, multiply the number by 0.1, or divide the number by 10.
One tenth of a mile.One tenth of a mile.One tenth of a mile.One tenth of a mile.
one tenth of 87 as a decimal number = 8.7 0.1 * 87 = 8.7
I think it would be .4160 but you will have to double check!
A tenth of a number deals with decimals. The way to think about a tenth is that 1/10 is one tenth, and 1/10 as a decimal is 0.1. therefore the first decimal place is always the tenth of a number, so to answer your question the nearest tenth of 15.58 would be 15.6.
One-tenth of a number is the same as dividing the number by 10.
To find one tenth of a number, multiply the number by 0.1, or divide the number by 10.
One tenth of a mile.One tenth of a mile.One tenth of a mile.One tenth of a mile.
You get one-tenth of a number when you divide the number by 10.
Each one is a tenth of the number before it.
The number 232.5 is equal to one tenth of the number 2,325.
one tenth of 87 as a decimal number = 8.7 0.1 * 87 = 8.7
To find one tenth of a number, multiply the number by 0.1. For example, one tenth of 23 is equal to 23 x 0.1 = 2.3
If you say any number, then no matter how close it is to one-tenth, I can always say another number that's even closer. There's no such thing as the number that's closest to one-tenth, either before it or after it.
If you want to find one tenth of a number, divide it by 10. For example, one tenth of 50 is 5. I teach my students about fraction this way. When you consider one tenth of something, 1/10, think of the denominator of the fraction as the number of equal groups you have to divide a particular number into. Then think of the numerator of the fraction as the number of those equal groups you are counting up. Another example: to find 3/10 of 50, divide 50 into ten equal groups of 5 each. Then count three of them: 5 + 5 + 5 = 15. 3/10 of 50 is 15.