Decimal Place Value to Thousandths
Decimal Place Value to Thousandths
In our base-10 number system, place value doesn't stop at the ones place. When we move to the right of the decimal point, we enter the world of fractions: tenths, hundredths, and thousandths.
The Decimal Place Value Chart
Just like whole numbers, every digit in a decimal has a specific value based on its position.
- Tenths: One place to the right of the decimal point (101 or 0.1).
- Hundredths: Two places to the right (1001 or 0.01).
- Thousandths: Three places to the right (10001 or 0.001).
The Golden Rule: Each place value is 10 times greater than the place to its right, and 101 of the value of the place to its left.
Finding the Value of a Digit
Let's look at the number 2.386:
- 2 is in the ones place → Value is 2
- 3 is in the tenths place → Value is 0.3
- 8 is in the hundredths place → Value is 0.08
- 6 is in the thousandths place → Value is 0.006
Reading and Writing Decimals
Decimals can be written in three main ways:
Standard Form
This is the normal way we write numbers using digits: 4.235
Word Form
When writing a decimal in words, the decimal point is read aloud as "and". You read the decimal part as if it were a whole number, followed by the name of the last place value.
4.235 is written as: Four and two hundred thirty-five thousandths.
Expanded Form
Expanded form breaks the number apart to show the value of every single digit added together.
For 4.235: 4+0.2+0.03+0.005
Using fractions and multiplication, it looks like this: (4×1)+(2×101)+(3×1001)+(5×10001)
Practice Examples
Example 1: Write "five and twenty-three thousandths" in standard form.
- "Five" is the whole number: 5
- "And" is the decimal point: ′
- "Twenty-three thousandths" means the number 23 must end in the thousandths place. We need a placeholder zero in the tenths place.
- Answer: 5.023
Example 2: What is the value of the digit 8 in 2.386?
- The 8 is two spaces to the right of the decimal point, which is the hundredths place.
- Answer: 0.08 (or 1008)