Place Value up to Ten Thousands
Understanding Place Value up to Ten Thousands
In math, every digit in a number has a specific value based on its position. This is called place value. As numbers get larger, we add new places to the left. For four-digit and five-digit numbers, we use the thousands and ten-thousands places.
The Place Value Chart
Let's look at the number 13,456. We can break it down into its different place values from right to left:
- 6 is in the ones place (Value: 6)
- 5 is in the tens place (Value: 50)
- 4 is in the hundreds place (Value: 400)
- 3 is in the thousands place (Value: 3,000)
- 1 is in the ten-thousands place (Value: 10,000)
Standard Form and Expanded Form
There are two common ways to write numbers:
Standard Form: This is the normal way we write numbers using just digits. Example: 3,625
Expanded Form: This is writing a number as an addition problem to show the value of each digit. Example: 3,625=3,000+600+20+5
If a number has a zero in one of its places, you simply skip that place in expanded form. For example, in the number 7,403, there are 0 tens:
- Standard Form: 7,403
- Expanded Form: 7,000+400+3
Practice Examples
Question: What is the value of the digit 3 in 13,456? Answer: The 3 is in the thousands place, so its value is 3,000.
Question: Write 5,000+200+60+1 in standard form. Answer: Combine the values to make the number 5,261.