Arithmetic Grade Six

Lesson Seventy-one: Decimal Multiplication


You can multiply more than one number in a single problem. Consider this example:

	.4 x .8 x .3 = .32 x .3 = .096

We started out with three numbers in a single multiplication problem. Then we multiplied the first two (.4 x .8 = .32). This gave us .32 x .3 which equals .096. We could have arrived at the same answer by completing this problem in a different order.

	.4 x .8 x .3 = .4 x .24 = .096
Or we could even rearrange the problem and do it like this:
 
	.4 x .3 x .8 = .12 x .8 = .096

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