If negative, yes. If positive, no.
6 x 1/2 = 3
-6 x 1/2 = -3
True
It is false.0.2 * 25 = 5, which has no decimal places.
When multiplying a whole number by a decimal with two places, ignore the decimal point and multiply as if you were multiplying two whole numbers. After you get the answer, re-insert the decimal point so that the product has two decimal places.
The product of 0.3 and 3 is 0.9. To calculate this, you simply multiply 0.3 by 3. When multiplying a decimal by a whole number, you can ignore the decimal point temporarily and multiply the numbers as if they were whole numbers. The final product will have the same number of decimal places as the total number of decimal places in the numbers being multiplied.
This is not necessarily true. 2 x 0.55 = 1.1
It is larger because the two whole numbers form a greater, larger number when multiplpied together. It is smaller when u multiply a whole number by a fraction because a fraction is a decimal and u get a smaller number when multiplying a number like 1/7 of 5
If one factor is a whole number and their product is 34.44, the other factor must be a decimal. To maintain the product as 34.44, the decimal factor can be expressed as 34.44 divided by the whole number. The least number of decimal places for the decimal factor would be two, since 34.44 has two decimal places, ensuring the product remains accurate when multiplied by the whole number.
True
The largest number is 45, which is a whole number. The decimal 0.55 is only a small part of a whole number.
It is false.0.2 * 25 = 5, which has no decimal places.
When multiplying a whole number by a decimal with two places, ignore the decimal point and multiply as if you were multiplying two whole numbers. After you get the answer, re-insert the decimal point so that the product has two decimal places.
The product of 0.3 and 3 is 0.9. To calculate this, you simply multiply 0.3 by 3. When multiplying a decimal by a whole number, you can ignore the decimal point temporarily and multiply the numbers as if they were whole numbers. The final product will have the same number of decimal places as the total number of decimal places in the numbers being multiplied.
Not necessarily: for example, consider 0.5 * 4 = 2
This is not necessarily true. 2 x 0.55 = 1.1
When multiplying a whole number by a decimal with two places, ignore the decimal point and multiply as if you were multiplying two whole numbers. After you get the answer, re-insert the decimal point so that the product has two decimal places.
The answer depends on what the decimal is: the processes for 9999.02 and 0.02 are very different.
False. 2 x 0.55 = 1.1