0:00:01.067,0:00:07.895 A single postage stamp costs $0.44. How much would a roll of 1000 stamps cost? 0:00:07.895,0:00:11.706 And there is really a couple of ways to do it, and I'll do it both ways just to show you they both work. 0:00:11.706,0:00:15.186 One is a kind of a faster way, but I want to make sure you understand why it works. 0:00:15.186,0:00:18.251 And then we'll verify that it actually gives us the right answer 0:00:18.251,0:00:21.014 using maybe the more traditional way of multiplying decimals. 0:00:21.014,0:00:26.726 So, we're starting at $0.44. I'll just write a 0.44. 0:00:26.726,0:00:31.557 Well, that's one stamp, so this is one stamp. I'll write it like this, 1 stamp. 0:00:31.557,0:00:33.752 How much would 10 stamps cost? 0:00:33.752,0:00:37.167 Well, if 1 stamp is $0.44, then 10 stamps, 0:00:37.167,0:00:39.818 we could move the decimal to the right one place, 0:00:39.818,0:00:43.746 and so it would be, and now this leading zero is not that useful, 0:00:43.746,0:00:51.532 so it would now be $4.4. Or if you want to make it clear, it would be $4.40. 0:00:51.532,0:00:56.120 Now, what happens if you want to have a hundred stamps? 100 stamps. 0:00:56.136,0:00:58.081 Well, the same idea is going to happen. 0:00:58.081,0:01:02.600 We're now taking 10 times more so we're going to move to the decimal to the right once. 0:01:02.600,0:01:07.183 So, a hundred stamps are going to cost, are going to cost $44.00. 0:01:07.183,0:01:08.991 And this should make sense for you. 0:01:08.991,0:01:15.898 If one stamp is 44 hundreths of a dollar, then a hundred stamps are going to be 0:01:15.898,0:01:20.594 44 hundreths of a hundred dollars, or $44. Or you could view it as 0:01:20.594,0:01:22.648 we've just moved the decimal over one place. 0:01:22.663,0:01:25.650 So if we want a thousand stamps, if we want 1000 stamps, 0:01:25.650,0:01:28.174 we would move the decimal to the right one more time. 0:01:28.174,0:01:35.293 Moving the decimal to the right is equivalent to multiplying by ten. So then it would be $440. 0:01:35.309,0:01:40.606 Now, we could put, add another trailing zero just to make it clear that there is no cents over here. 0:01:40.636,0:01:44.057 So if you want to do it really quickly, you could've started with $0.44. 0:01:44.133,0:01:48.283 And you say, look, I'm not multiplying by ten. I'm not multiplying by a hundred. 0:01:48.313,0:01:53.221 I'm multiplying by a thousand. You're going to have to put another trailing zero over here. 0:01:53.267,0:01:58.556 And you would move the decimals from over here to over here. 0:01:58.556,0:02:04.721 You've essentially multiplied this times ten times ten times ten, which is a thousand. 0:02:04.721,0:02:10.450 So then this would become $440. 0:02:10.466,0:02:14.962 So let's verify that this works the exactly the same if we multiply the traditional way 0:02:14.962,0:02:24.864 the way we multiply decimals. So if you have 1000 times $0.44. 0:02:24.879,0:02:33.056 So you start over here. 4 times 0 is 0, 4 times 0 is 0, 4 times 0 is 0, 4 times 1 is 4. 0:02:33.071,0:02:36.204 Or you could just say, hey, this was 4 times a thousand. 0:02:36.204,0:02:39.822 Then we're going to go one place over so we're going to add a zero. 0:02:39.853,0:02:47.950 And we, once again, we're going to have 4 times 0 is 0, 4 times 0 is 0, 4 times 0 is 0, 4 times 1 is 4. 0:02:47.950,0:02:51.216 Or we just did 4 times a thousand. So that is 4000, 0:02:51.216,0:02:54.192 if you don't include this zero that we added here ahead of time 0:02:54.192,0:02:57.002 because we're going one place to the left. 0:02:57.017,0:03:01.077 And then we have nothing left. I haven't at all thought about the decimals right now. 0:03:01.108,0:03:05.860 So far I've really just viewed it as a thousand times 44. I've been ignoring the decimal. 0:03:05.860,0:03:08.167 So if it was a thousand times 44, 0:03:08.167,0:03:14.792 we would get 0 plus 0 is 0, 0 plus 0 is 0, 0 plus 0 is 0, 4 plus 0 is 4, 0:03:14.792,0:03:19.498 4 plus nothing is 4. And if you ignore the decimal, that makes a lot of sense. 0:03:19.498,0:03:24.437 Because a thousand times 4 is 4000 and a thousand times 40 would be 40 000. 0:03:24.437,0:03:30.525 So you would get 44 000. But this of course is not a 44. This is a 44 hundreths. 0:03:30.525,0:03:34.312 We have, between the two numbers, two numbers behind the decimal point. 0:03:34.312,0:03:38.368 So we need to have two numbers behind or to the right of the decimal point in our answer. 0:03:38.368,0:03:40.802 So one, two. Right over there. 0:03:40.802,9:59:59.000 So, once again, we get $440.00 for the thousand stamps.