The decimal point moves to the left.
How do you change metric units?
Since there are 100 cm in 1 m, you must divide 12 by 100. This gives you 12/100, which can be reduced to 3/25, or 0.12 in decimal form. Whenever you are converting in metric units, you only have to move the decimal based on the different measurements. In this case, a meter is 100 centimeters, so the decimal is moved two places over. Which direction you move it depends on which way you are converting. Converting from a smaller size to a bigger one requires you to move the decimal to the left, and converting from a larger size to a smaller one requires you to move the decimal to the right, adding zeroes as necessary.
you divide the smaller # into the bigger #----
To convert from a smaller unit to a larger unit in the metric system, you move the decimal point to the left. Each time you move the decimal point one place to the left, you are multiplying by a factor of 10.
False - when converting from a larger unit to a smaller unit there will be more of them so you must multiply. What you multiply by depends upon the units, for example converting feet to inches you multiply by 12; converting pounds to ounces you multiply by 16. It is only with the metric system of units where you multiply by a power of 10 to convert a large unit to a smaller unit, for example 2.5 kg is 2500 g (multiply by 1000 or 103).
When you are converting a measurement made in a small metric unit to a larger one. 16 cm = 0.16 metres: simple!
In the metric system basic units are multiplied or divided by 10 to get larger and smaller units
In the metric system basic units are multiplied or divided by 10 to get larger and smaller units
In the metric system basic units are multiplied or divided by 10 to get larger and smaller units
No. That principle applies for most unit conversions in the metric system, but not for all and it does not apply at all for imperial measurements.
The decimal would go left. For example: 18.0: Smaller: 1.8 Bigger: 180