decimal places go .1(tenths) .01(hundredths), and .001(thousandths) and there are 10 thousandths in a hundredth and 10 hundredths in a tenth .9 is 9 tenths which is 90 hundredths or 900 thousandths but normally you would just say "nine tenths"
4.98 to hundredths place. Herewith decimal places/ '4' = units Decimal point '9' = tenths '8' = hundredths '3' = thousandths '2' = tens of thousandths.
The place value of 9 in 1.0309 is hundredths. The 9 is in the fourth decimal place.
'9' is in the 'hundredths' column. NB 38.29 '3' is in the Tens Column '8' is in the Units column '2' is in the Tenths column '9' is in the Hundredths column NB THe next decimal digit would be in the Thousandths column. NNB Note the use of the suffix '--ths'. for decimal numbers.
Tenths, hundredths, thousandths, ten-thousandths, etc...
convert9 thousandths, 5 hundredths, 8 ones, 6ten-thousandths, 4 tenths in decimal
decimal places go .1(tenths) .01(hundredths), and .001(thousandths) and there are 10 thousandths in a hundredth and 10 hundredths in a tenth .9 is 9 tenths which is 90 hundredths or 900 thousandths but normally you would just say "nine tenths"
2.09 the 9 is in the hundredth position. .209 is 209 thousandths.
4.98 to hundredths place. Herewith decimal places/ '4' = units Decimal point '9' = tenths '8' = hundredths '3' = thousandths '2' = tens of thousandths.
The place value of 9 in 1.0309 is hundredths. The 9 is in the fourth decimal place.
Well, honey, to write nine ten-thousandths as a decimal, you simply put a 9 in the ten-thousandths place, followed by zeros in the other decimal places. So, it looks like this: 0.0009. Easy peasy lemon squeezy!
'9' is in the 'hundredths' column. NB 38.29 '3' is in the Tens Column '8' is in the Units column '2' is in the Tenths column '9' is in the Hundredths column NB THe next decimal digit would be in the Thousandths column. NNB Note the use of the suffix '--ths'. for decimal numbers.
In the number 45.901, the digit 9 is in the hundredths place. The place value of a digit is determined by its position in relation to the decimal point. Moving from right to left, the place values in a decimal number are tenths, hundredths, thousandths, and so on.
9/100 x 700 = 63
Tenths, hundredths, thousandths, ten-thousandths, etc...
The 9 is in the tenths column. Remember it's Hundreds, Tens, Ones, decimal, Tenths, Hundredths, Thousandths.
0.6349 Here is a list of column names in decimal 0 = Units . = Decimal point '6' = tenths '3' = hundredths '4' = thousandths '9' = tens of thousandths '3' = hundreds of thousandths '1' = millionths. NB Note the suffic '---ths' at the end of each decimal column.