It is false.0.2 * 25 = 5, which has no decimal places.
When you multiply decimals, you just ignore the decimal until the end, then, to find the amount of decimal places in your answer, you add the amount of decimal places in both your factors
-- Multiply 73 by 8 , to get 584 .-- Count the total number of decimal places that you've ignored in both factors. (3)-- Mark off that number of decimal places (3) in the product, to get 0.584 .
True
The product is the answer you get when you multiply two numbers. The two numbers are called factors. The number the factors make when you multiply them is called the product
Two numbers are factors of a product when they multiply with each other to become the product. For example, if the product number is 10, then our factors can be 2 and 5, or 1 and 10.
When you multiply decimals, you just ignore the decimal until the end, then, to find the amount of decimal places in your answer, you add the amount of decimal places in both your factors
-- Multiply 73 by 8 , to get 584 .-- Count the total number of decimal places that you've ignored in both factors. (3)-- Mark off that number of decimal places (3) in the product, to get 0.584 .
A product.
True
To find the product of 0.6 and 0.9, you multiply the two numbers together. In this case, 0.6 multiplied by 0.9 equals 0.54. This is because when you multiply decimals, you multiply the numbers as if they were whole numbers and then count the total number of decimal places in the factors and put that many decimal places in the product.
The product is the answer you get when you multiply two numbers. The two numbers are called factors. The number the factors make when you multiply them is called the product
4
The number of decimal places for the product will be the summation of the amount of decimal places of the 2 factors. For example, if your products have 2 decimals each to the right of zero then the product will have an answer with 4 decimals to the right of zero.
Two numbers are factors of a product when they multiply with each other to become the product. For example, if the product number is 10, then our factors can be 2 and 5, or 1 and 10.
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
False. 2 x 0.55 = 1.1