There are 1,360 tenths in 136.
The 5 is in the tenths column.
9 is the digit in the tenths place. The tenths column is the column immediately to the right of the decimal point.
The digit in the tenths column is the 1.
The tenths column is the first column after the decimal point, so it is 2.
There are 1,360 tenths in 136.
The tenths column is the first column after the decimal point → the digit in the tenths column is '9'.
There are 136 tenths in 13.6
The 5 is in the tenths column.
9 is the digit in the tenths place. The tenths column is the column immediately to the right of the decimal point.
The digit in the tenths column is the 1.
The 4 is in the tenths column.
The tenths column is the first column after the decimal point, so it is 2.
It is 2 tenths, as it is in the tenths column.
It is: .3 = 3/10
The tenths column is the first column to the right of the decimal. In the example it is the column represented by the digit 2.
There are 2 tenths in 6.25.. The 6 is in the ones column, the 2 is in the tenths column and the 5 is in the hundredths column.. (There's a difference between tens/tenths and hundreds/hundredths)