To find the answer all you do is add a zero to the number.
In that case you get a different number.
A number cannot have a place value - only a specific digit with a number can have a place value.A number cannot have a place value - only a specific digit with a number can have a place value.A number cannot have a place value - only a specific digit with a number can have a place value.A number cannot have a place value - only a specific digit with a number can have a place value.
A whole number does not have a place value: only a single digit in a number has a place value - a different place value for each digit.
A number cannot have a place value. A single digit has a place value within a number.A number cannot have a place value. A single digit has a place value within a number.A number cannot have a place value. A single digit has a place value within a number.A number cannot have a place value. A single digit has a place value within a number.
A single digit (in a number) can have a place value. A whole number cannot have a place value!
No.
When you multiply a number by 10, each digit in the number shifts one place to the left in the place value system. This increases the value of each digit by a factor of ten. For example, the number 234 becomes 2340 when multiplied by 10, where the 2 now represents 2000 instead of 200. Thus, multiplying by 10 effectively increases the overall value of the number.
When you multiply a number by 10, you move the decimal point one place to the right. For example, if you have the number 3.5 and you multiply it by 10, it becomes 35. This shifting increases the value of the number, effectively scaling it up by a factor of ten.
In that case you get a different number.
To multiply two digit numbers, multiply each place value of a factor by each place value digit and add the results.
To multiply a two-digit number by a one-digit number, first break the two-digit number into its tens and units. Multiply the one-digit number by the tens place value, then multiply it by the units place value. Finally, add the two results together to get the final product. For example, to multiply 23 by 4, calculate (20 × 4) + (3 × 4) = 80 + 12 = 92.
The place value increases to the next power of 10. A Unit becomes a Ten A Ten becomes a Hundred A Hundred becomes a Thousand and so on.
A number cannot have a place value - only a specific digit with a number can have a place value.A number cannot have a place value - only a specific digit with a number can have a place value.A number cannot have a place value - only a specific digit with a number can have a place value.A number cannot have a place value - only a specific digit with a number can have a place value.
A number cannot have a place value: only a single digit in a number has a place value.
Multiply it by -1?
This is because we count in tens so that the place value of a digit is ten times the place value of the digit to its right.
A whole number does not have a place value: only a single digit in a number has a place value - a different place value for each digit.