There is no digit in the thousands column. There is a 1 in the thousandths column.
9
0.6349 Here is a list of column names in decimal 0 = Units . = Decimal point '6' = tenths '3' = hundredths '4' = thousandths '9' = tens of thousandths '3' = hundreds of thousandths '1' = millionths. NB Note the suffic '---ths' at the end of each decimal column.
The 9 is in the tenths column. Remember it's Hundreds, Tens, Ones, decimal, Tenths, Hundredths, Thousandths.
The 7 is in the second column after the decimal point which is the hundredths column, so it is seven hundredths.
.003 would be in the thousandths column.
ten thousandths, but it has a proper name
There is no digit in the thousands column. There is a 1 in the thousandths column.
The 1 is in the units column and is one. The 6 is in the tenths column and is six tenths. The 3 is in the hundredths column and is three hundredths. The 9 is in the thousandths column and is nine thousandths.
9
8
The 7 is in the 4th column after the decimal point; this is the ten thousandths (1/10000) column. Thus the 7 is seven ten-thousandths.
7.846 Hundredths column is '4' NB Tenths columns is '8' Thousandths column is '6' The units column is '7'
5. The third digit
0
The 2 is in the thousandths (1/1000) column, so it has the value two thousandths.
You round in the same way that you would with a whole number. If the number in the tens of thousandths column is 5 or higher round the thousandths up, if 4 or below round down. With the number 6.1778425 the 8 is the tens of thousandths column so the 7 in the thousandths column needs to be rounded to 8. u . ths hths ths This makes the answer 6.178 -6 . 1 7 8.