It is because the sample size for the second survey was larger.
Looking at the decimal part, the first begins with 6 and the second begins with 3. The 6 is therefore larger. It is the same as 6.600 is. So the .600 is obviously larger than .325 is.
0.75 is larger. To determine which decimals are larger, always look at the first number after the decimal point. Whichever digit is larger is the larger number. If they're the same, look to the second digit to see which is bigger, and so on. In this case, because 7 is greater than 3, 0.75 is larger than 0.375.
Just divide the first number by the second one.
1.8 is larger because the numbers before the second decimal are larger
It's not larger.
Inbreeding
if the first negative is samller than the second its positive but if the first one is a larger number than the second then its a positive
It is because the sample size for the second survey was larger.
One option for comparing two numbers is to subtract the first number from the second number. If the result is less than zero, the first number is larger. If the result is greater than zero, the second number is larger. If the result is zero, the numbers are equal. Another option (for positive numbers) would be to divide the first number by the second number. If the result is greater than one, the first number is larger. If the result is less than one, the second number is larger. If the result is one, the numbers are equal. This rule flips if you are comparing negative numbers.
The second one.
First, it will be larger by far than other ants in the colony. Second, it will have a HUGE abdomen.
The first value of 5, .55, is 11 times greater than the second value, .05.
No, 5/6 is smaller than 6/5. The first is less than one, the second is larger than one.
Looking at the decimal part, the first begins with 6 and the second begins with 3. The 6 is therefore larger. It is the same as 6.600 is. So the .600 is obviously larger than .325 is.
What was the question again?
A microsecond is smaller than a second. One microsecond is equal to one millionth of a second.