It is 9.88
The 9 is in the tenths column. Remember it's Hundreds, Tens, Ones, decimal, Tenths, Hundredths, Thousandths.
In what decimal is the tens and tenths place value 6, hundredths place value 9, and the remaining place values 0
0.314 can be rounded in hundredths, tenths and ones. In hundredths, it is 0.31, in tenths, it is 0.3 and in ones, it is 0
To express 6 ones and 2 hundredths in decimals, you would write it as 6.02. The digit to the left of the decimal point represents the ones place, while the digits to the right of the decimal point represent the tenths and hundredths places, respectively. In this case, the number 6 represents the six ones, and the 02 represents the two hundredths.
convert9 thousandths, 5 hundredths, 8 ones, 6ten-thousandths, 4 tenths in decimal
No there is not a ones place in a decimal. It's tenths, hundredths, thousandths, ten thousandths, etc.
No. It separates the ones place from the tenths place.Examples5.89 The decimal is between the 5 in the ones place and the 8 in the tenths place.43.26 The decimal is between the 3 in the ones place and the 2 in the tenths place.147.902 The decimal is between the 7 in the ones place and the 9 in the tenths place.
It is 9.88
7 ones and 90 tenths written as a decimal is the same as 7 ones and 9 ones written as a decimal, so the answer is 16.0
3.42
the second digit from the decimal point. 7 ones . decimal 5 tenths 2 hundredths 2 thousandths
The ones in the percent would be in the hundredths place. The bold number is the ones place. 98%. Before the hundredths place are the tenths place and the ones. The decimal is 0.98 or .98.
39.64
Since it is a decimal, the 9 stands for tenths, the 5 stands for hundredths, and the 4 stands for ones. Going to the right -> behind the decimal point is tenths, hundredths, thousandths, and so one (there is no such thing as ones here). Going to the left <- in front of the decimal point is where ones, tens, hundreds, thousands, and so on begins.
The 9 is in the tenths column. Remember it's Hundreds, Tens, Ones, decimal, Tenths, Hundredths, Thousandths.
You are lining up the place value columns, so that the tens are under each other, the ones are under each other, the tenths are under each other, the hundredths are under each other, etc so that when you do the addition/subtraction you are adding/subtracting the tens from the tens, the ones from the ones, the tenths from the tenths, the hundredths from the hundredths, etc. The easiest way to line up the place value columns is to align the decimal points. Remember that an empty place value column is the same as that place value column containing a zero. When adding/subtracting whole numbers align the numbers at their right hand end. What you are doing is actually aligning the "hidden" decimal points - the decimal point sits between the ones place value column and the tenths place value column; when there is no decimal part of a number, the decimal point (and trailing zeros) are not written, so it is "hiding" after the last (ones) digit of the number.