On the 200 scale Iam getting 44.9 Is this the ohm reading because the resistance did not go over 200?
Yes.
On the 2K scale .045 Do you multiply this by 1000 unless you go have a whole number?
It's .045 K = 45 ohms, so, yes.
On the 20K scale .04 Do we multiply this by 1000 too?
It's .04 K = 4[0] ohms, so, yes.
on the 2M scale .000 If there was a digit to the right of the decimal point, what would that be multiplied by?
Full scale is 200,000,000 ohms but not all the digits are displayed, though there are probably laboratory meters that can do this.
Such a meter displaying this many digits would read
200,000,045 ohms
so you would see a zero in the fourth place of your meter.
If you really want a challenge, try to decode the accuracy specs on your meter and check if these readings indicate your meter is within tolerance, assuming the 44.9 ohms is exactly correct.
You might also Google
"significant figures"
and
"scientific notation"
Also doing the math to find resistance of 25W, 120 volt bulb = 576 ohms
Measuring the resistance of that bulb while off (cold) = 44.9 ohms
Question: Does the resistance change that much?
Wiki says the cold resistance is 10x to 15x less than the hot resistance.
Since the resistance drops as the current drops an incand. bulb in series with an outlet [a "voltage source"] acts somewhat like a "current source."