Want this question answered?
the columns go in this order .......|thousands|hundreds|tens|ones|.|tenths|hundredths|thousandths|....... your number is 95.1 |9|5|.|1| 9 is in the ten's column!!
It is not a matter of aligning the decimal points, but aligning the place value columns so that the ones are under each other, the tens are under each other, the tenths are under each other, etc which is the proper way to subtract. As the decimal points are between the ones and tenths columns, with those place value columns aligned, the decimal points are aligned.Aligning the decimal points is an easy way to remember to align the place value columns, as with the decimal points aligned all the place value columns are automatically aligned.
4 ones equals 40 tenths.
20 tenths; 2 ones.
There are 20 tenths because there are 10 tenths in one whole.
80 tenths 1 ones
By default, they go where the selected columns are, pushing the existing ones to the right.By default, they go where the selected columns are, pushing the existing ones to the right.By default, they go where the selected columns are, pushing the existing ones to the right.By default, they go where the selected columns are, pushing the existing ones to the right.By default, they go where the selected columns are, pushing the existing ones to the right.By default, they go where the selected columns are, pushing the existing ones to the right.By default, they go where the selected columns are, pushing the existing ones to the right.By default, they go where the selected columns are, pushing the existing ones to the right.By default, they go where the selected columns are, pushing the existing ones to the right.By default, they go where the selected columns are, pushing the existing ones to the right.By default, they go where the selected columns are, pushing the existing ones to the right.
58 tenths (58/10)= 5 ones and 8 tenths(5 8/10)
5.3 tenths
One 1, 8 tenths
It could be 5.08
Yes. Compare numbers by starting with the highest place value column of the numbers and move right a column if they are the same until a difference is found. ones columns are both zero, try the tenths: 0.203 has 2 tenths, 0.09 has 0 tenths; 2 > 0 → 0.203 > 0.09