4
Water at 0 is less dense than water at 4 because at the 0 the volume is larger than at 4.
the lower the number, the larger the wire. 0 AWG is larger than 4 AWG More information: The above answer is correct but I wish to add more information. What you are calling 0 AWG is usually written as 1/0 and called "one ought". From there the numbers get larger: 1/0, 2/0 (read "2 ought"), 3/0, and 4/0. From there wires are written in there MCM size or kcmils (kilo-circular-mills) which stands for thousand circular mills, the same as MCM. That's a lot of useless information unless you are a competent electrician. I just wanted to clarify that 0 AWG is commonly called 1/0, or "one ought."
how do you write 4 digit numbers with a 0 in ten and hundred place then use the same number to tell which number is larger
the lower the number, the larger the wire. 0 AWG is larger than 4 AWG More information: The above answer is correct but I wish to add more information. What you are calling 0 AWG is usually written as 1/0 and called "one ought". From there the numbers get larger: 1/0, 2/0 (read "2 ought"), 3/0, and 4/0. From there wires are written in there MCM size or kcmils (kilo-circular-mills) which stands for thousand circular mills, the same as MCM. That's a lot of useless information unless you are a competent electrician. I just wanted to clarify that 0 AWG is commonly called 1/0, or "one ought."
5 is larger than 0 or 1 or 2 or 3 or 4
Larger
2
The answer is 018. 018=18 because the 0 in 018 does not count for anything. Same with the 04, take the zero away, 04=4. Therefore 18 is larger than 4 so your answer is 4 (Four).
The answer depends on the degree of rounding. To the nearest integer, it is 4. To the nearest ten (or larger), it is 0.
Not always: Consider 3 and 2: the difference is 3 - 2 = 1 < the larger Now consider 3 and 0: the difference is 3 - 0 = 3 = the larger Now consider 3 and -1: the difference is 3 - (-1) = 4 > the larger.
7
0 is.