+sqrt(47) is one possible answer.
It is an irrational number that lies between 7 and 8
4*sqrt(2) Rational multiples of irrational numbers are irrational. sqrt(2) is about 1.414, and 5/4 = 1.25 < 1.414... < 1.75 = 7/4 so 4*sqrt(2) is between 5 and 7, and is irrational.
It is an irrational number and lies between 6 and 7
No it is a whole number so it cannot be irrational.
-7 is a rational number
An irrational number between 5 and 7 is the square root of 35 (which is = 5.9160797831.....). This number can't be expressed as terminating decimals, which means that it goes on forever.An irrational number is an irrational number is any real number that cannot be expressed as a simple fraction or terminating decimals.
the square root of 37
yes there is, it's between every number
It is an irrational number that lies between 7 and 8
I can't tell you the irrational number between 0.2 and 0.3; there an infinite number of irrationals in this range.For an example - root(2) / 7 is slightly more than 0.202, and is irrational.
4*sqrt(2) Rational multiples of irrational numbers are irrational. sqrt(2) is about 1.414, and 5/4 = 1.25 < 1.414... < 1.75 = 7/4 so 4*sqrt(2) is between 5 and 7, and is irrational.
It is an irrational number and lies between 6 and 7
No it is a whole number so it cannot be irrational.
-7 is a rational number
You wont be able to add a rational number and an irrational number and get a number not in a fraction ( 3 + 22/7) (21/7 + 22/7 = 43/7) So, yes as you see in the example above it made another irrational number.
No.
Yes - if I had an irrational number x, and I added that to the number (7-x), I would end up with 7.If the number is irrational, it can be subtracted from a rational/integer to make another irrational.