A rational number always repeats or terminates which can be thought of as repeating zeroes.
It is a rational number because it terminates.
There is no place where there is a call!
No, because the decimal terminates after the 8.
Any number that either terminates or repeats the same pattern over and over is rational - and vice versa: any rational number either terminates, or repeats.
A rational number always repeats or terminates which can be thought of as repeating zeroes.
The number has a decimal representation that terminates (after 9 digits). If it terminates, the number is rational.
The decimal expansion of a rational number always either terminates after finitely many digits or begins to repeat the same finite sequence of digits over and over. As 7.37 terminates after 2 digits it must therefore be rational.
No. A rational number is a number that either terminates or repeats. An irrational number neither terminates nor repeats. Therefore, it cannot be both.
It is a rational number because it terminates.
Yes because it terminates
Every prime number terminates.
A terminating number. It can also be called a rational number.
Terminating decimal
There is no place where there is a call!
No, because the decimal terminates after the 8.
Any number that either terminates or repeats the same pattern over and over is rational - and vice versa: any rational number either terminates, or repeats.