Title: Using Place Value to Write Numbers
1Using Place Value to Write Numbers
2Writing Numbers
- Identify the number of places needed by counting
out place values. Look for the largest and
smallest place values. - Make blanks for each of those places.
- Put the decimal point in the correct place
between the whole numbers and the decimals. - Fill the numbers into the correct places.
3- Five thousand, six hundred three and nineteen
thousandths
- Look for the word and.
- If you see one, make a decimal point.
41
2
3
4
- Five thousand, six hundred three and nineteen
thousandths
2) Identify the largest whole number place value.
Make that many blanks to the left of the decimal
point.
,
5- Five thousand, six hundred three and nineteen
thousandths
3) Write these numbers on the correct blank.
,
5
0
6
3
4) Put zeros in places where there are no values.
61
2
3
- Five thousand, six hundred three and nineteen
thousandths
4) Identify the smallest decimal place value.
Make that many blanks to the right of the decimal
point.
,
5
0
6
3
1
2
3
7- Five thousand, six hundred three and nineteen
thousandths
4) Identify how many of that place value exists.
The last digit of that number MUST be put on the
last blank (farthest from the zero).
19
,
5
0
6
3
1
9
8- Five thousand, six hundred three and nineteen
thousandths
5) Fill in any extra empty blanks (near the
decimal point) with zeroes.
,
5
0
6
3
0
1
9
9Thirty thousand fifty and nine hundredths
3
0
0
5
0
0
9
30,050.09
10One hundred nine thousand two and eleven
hundredths
109,002.11
11Fourteen and 8 hundred thousandths
14.00008