Well, first you need to decide what place you want to round it TO.
Example: Round it to the nearest hundredth:
The next larger hundredth is 186.29 .
The next smaller hundredth is 186.28 .
Now look at it.
186.282 is closer to 186.28 than it is to 186.29 .
So the nearest hundredth is 186.28 .
-- When 186.282 is rounded to the nearest hundredth, it becomes 186.28 .
Similarly . . .
-- When 186.282 is rounded to the nearest tenth, it becomes 186.3 .
-- When 186.282 is rounded to the nearest whole number, it becomes 186 .
-- When 186.282 is rounded to the nearest ten, it becomes 190 .
-- When 186.282 is rounded to the nearest hundred, it becomes 200 .
-- When 186.282 is rounded to the nearest thousand or anything larger,
it becomes zero.
I'm curious . . . where did this number come from ?
It happens to be one thousandth of the speed of light, in miles per hour.
Did it come up in science class, or did a science geek use it for
one of the problems in math ?
3 feet west + 4 feet east means that the length of the rectangle is 7
2 feet south and 1 foot north means that the height (or width) 3.
Since the rectangle is 3 ft by 7ft the total distance around (perimeter) is 2 (l+w) or in this case 2 (7 +3) = 2 (10) = 20 ft Answer b
Drawing a picture helps.
Answer:
dhbsugubihsvhukejbduisxkgdbwq
Step-by-step explanation:
iwdyhbjksgcsbhhsnnsgdhhsns
Answer: p = -4
Step-by-step explanation:
9-4(2p-1) = 45
9-8p+4 = 45
13-8p = 45
-8p = 45 - 13
-8p = 32
p = -(32/8)
p = -4
Answer:
imma look this up rq
Step-by-step explanation: