Processing math: 100%

4.4: Rounding Numbers

If a pair of jeans cost $49.98, what amount would you say if someone asks what you paid for them? You would probably say, “They cost around $50.”

We often round cents to dollars as we go about our lives. You may already have an idea of how to do this. For example, answer these questions.

  • About how much do your groceries cost each month?
  • About how much does it cost to fill a small car’s gas tank?

Look at your answers. The amount for groceries may be quite large. When you estimated your answer, how did you round the amount?

For example, if your real monthly grocery bill was $481.73, you might have said $482 or perhaps $480. Maybe you even have estimated to the nearest hundred dollars and said, “About $500 a month for groceries.” All those estimates would be correct.

The amount for a tank of gas is less than a month’s groceries. How did you estimate?

For example, a small car may take $54.72 of gas.

  • If you estimated to the nearest dollar, you would say, “About $55.”
  • If you estimated to the nearest ten dollars, you would say, “About $50.”
  • If you rounded to the nearest dollar, you would say, “54 dollars.”

We round a number in different ways depending on several things:

  • The size of the number we are rounding.
  • What we are going to do with the number after we have rounded it off.
  • Our own convenience.

Carefully review the place value for whole numbers:

  • hundred thousands
  • ten thousands
  • one thousand
  • hundreds
  • tens
  • ones
  • decimal

License

Icon for the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License

Intermediate PreAlgebra: Building Success Copyright © 2024 by Kim Tamblyn, TRU Open Press is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

Share This Book