Hex as in Hexagon
The correct word form is two and thirty-six hundredths.
Mohawk
To write 5650000 in word form, you would say "five million, six hundred fifty-five thousand." The number 5 in the millions place represents "five million," the 6 in the hundred thousands place represents "six hundred thousand," and the 5 in the ten thousands place represents "fifty-five thousand."
Six tenths or six hundred thousandths.
Yes, '1936' is a noun, a word for a number or an amount (one thousand, nine hundred, thirty six), or a year (nineteen thirty six).
number six represents a number, six.
To write 2.061 in word form, you would say "two and sixty-one thousandths." The number 2 represents the whole number, the zero represents the tenths place, the six represents the hundredths place, and the one represents the thousandths place. Therefore, when reading the number aloud, you would say "two point zero six one" or "two and sixty-one thousandths."
To write 5.36 in word form, you would say "five and thirty-six hundredths." This represents the whole number 5, followed by the decimal point separating the whole number from the decimal portion. The number 36 in the decimal represents thirty-six hundredths.
Six.
To write 0.0006 in word form, you would say "zero point zero zero zero six." This represents the decimal number where the six is in the thousandths place. Remember that each digit to the right of the decimal point represents a power of 10, with the first digit being tenths, the second hundredths, the third thousandths, and so on.
In word form, 17.006 is "seventeen and six thousandths." The number to the right of the decimal point represents the decimal part of the number, which in this case is six thousandths. The number to the left of the decimal point is read as a whole number, which is seventeen in this instance.
The number 49.36 can be written in word form as "forty-nine and thirty-six hundredths." This format clearly represents the whole number part and the decimal part, indicating that there are thirty-six hundredths after the decimal point.