Yes. Imagine slicing a pie into ten pieces. If you take 9 of the 10 pieces you have nine tenth. If you take 3 of the 10 pieces you have three tenth. Clearly 9 pieces of pie are more than 3.
If you are comparing two numbers that are both fractions of tenths, you can just look at the numbers on the top to see what is larger.
Yes. 9/10 is 20% larger than 3/4 .
No, nine thirds is just three so three and one third is one third larger than nine thirds
Deci- means tenth of Centi means hundredth of so you know from fractions a tenth is larger than a hundredth, so a decimeter is larger.
three to the power of six is larger than six to the power of three because three to the power of six is seven-hundred-twenty-nine and 6 to the power of three is two-hundred-sixteen.
Nine is larger than eight.
Yes. 9/10 is 20% larger than 3/4 .
Of course not. 9.1 is less than 9.5.
No, nine thirds is just three so three and one third is one third larger than nine thirds
9.13 is larger because 9.13 is one tenth larger than 9.03. Also because the number that is next to the decimal is bigger than the other one. For example: 0.97 is larger than 0.67 because the nine is bigger than the 6
7/10 is bigger than 3/4 with the default
Yes. One whole and a tenth is more than 9 tenths, which is not even a whole
0.2
its not 0.09 (nine hundredths) 0.1 (one tenth)
Deci- means tenth of Centi means hundredth of so you know from fractions a tenth is larger than a hundredth, so a decimeter is larger.
not exactikally, but about
three to the power of six is larger than six to the power of three because three to the power of six is seven-hundred-twenty-nine and 6 to the power of three is two-hundred-sixteen.
8.8