Coins with a diameter that has a five in the hundredths place include the U.S. quarter, which has a diameter of 24.26 mm, and the U.S. half dollar, which has a diameter of 30.61 mm. Additionally, some foreign coins, like the Euro coin (both 1 and 2 Euro coins), also have diameters that fit this criterion. The specific measurement must be checked for each coin to confirm the five in the hundredths place.
Six and ninety-five hundredths is already rounded the nearest hundredths place.
It is five hundredths
It is: 0.05 = five hundredths
five hundredths
0.65
Six and ninety-five hundredths is already rounded the nearest hundredths place.
It is five hundredths
If the point is your decimal, the zero in the tenths place and the five in the hundredths place, then "five hundredths" is all you need.
That's how numbers go. The first decimal place is tenths, the second is hundredths. 0.75 has 7 tenths, which is 70 hundredths. Add the 5 in the hundredths place and you've got seventy-five hundredths.
It is: 0.05 = five hundredths
It is in the hundredths place, so it is worth 0.05 which is five hundredths.
5.31 The 3 is in the tenths decimal place, the 1 is in the hundredths decimal place. That makes 31 hundredths.
five hundredths
five hundredths 5/100
0.65
Three and five hundredths can be written as 3.05 in decimal form. This is because the decimal point separates the whole number part (3) from the decimal part (0.05), which represents five hundredths. The digit to the right of the decimal point is in the tenths place, and the digit to the right of that is in the hundredths place.
I do not understand what you are asking. Seventy Five would be 7 in the tens (10) place and 5 in the ones (1) place. If you want .75 (point seven five) then 7 is in the tenths (1/10) place and 5 is in the hundredths (1/100) place. This number could read as 'seventy five hundredths'. Hope this helps.