no
The third multiple of 10 is 1000 of course. Actually the third multiple of 10 besides 0 would be 30; 10, 20, and 30 are multiples of 10.
0 is greater.
2
10 degrees as an angle is acute because it is greater than 0 but less than 90 degrees.
10
10 celsius
no
list the first 10 common mutiles of 2,and 4 greater than 0
10
LOL :) 0 < 10
4/10 when converted to decimal form is 0.4. 0.45 is greater than 0.4 because it has a 5 in the hundredths column, which is greater than the 0 in the hundredths column that 0.4 has. The 0 is assumed when it is not written.
I'm guessing you mean, "What is 10 to the 0th power?"The answer, of course, is the same for 10, as it is for anything else, 1, because numbers greater than 1 to a negative power are less than 1, but greater than 0, and numbers greater than 1 to powers between 0 and 1 are between 1 and that number.
No well, uhh, well, if you round 5 up you get 10, 10 isn't in the whole decimal so it becomes 0. 1 is greater than 0. So that gives you 0.21 > 0.20.
The third multiple of 10 is 1000 of course. Actually the third multiple of 10 besides 0 would be 30; 10, 20, and 30 are multiples of 10.
It means that something is greater than some number, and smaller than some other number. For example, the solution of an inequality might state that "x" is greater than 0, and that "x" is also less than 10, in symbols: x > 0 and x < 10 Which can be written in shorthand notation as: 0 < x < 10 Note that instead of "less than" and "greater than", you might also use "less-than-or-equal" and "greater-than-or-equal", or some combination. For example: 0 < x <= 10
Positive 10 is greater than negative 2. A good way to help visualise is to imagine a number line with 0 in the middle. 1,2,3,4 head off to the right, and -1, -2, -3, -4 head off to the left. The further the right a number is, the greater it is. So 6 is greater than 2. 8 is greater than 0, and 10 is greater than negative 2.