All natural numbers are integers, not all integers are natural numbers.
Real numbers consist of all numbers except complex numbers. Every integer is a natural number but every rational number is not a natural number as well as an integer. So, the answer to the question is integer.
No. The set of integer includes negative integers which are not natural numbers..
There is no natural number that is not an integer. Natural numbers are 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9. As you can see, all natural numbers are integers.
It's redundant. The LCM of two natural numbers is the smallest integer solution. It's the smallest positive integer that all the members of a given set of numbers will divide into evenly with no remainder.
No, but every natural is an integer. Only the positive integers and 0 are natural numbers.
Zero
no # all numbers are real #'s
It is only an integer, as natural numbers are all integers from 0 (e.g. 0, 1, 2, 3, 4…). According to another definition of the set of natural numbers, integers from 1 are considered natural. In other words, according to the first definition, the set of natural numbers is all non-negative integers. According to the second definition, the set of natural numbers is all positive integers.
The integers are all the natural numbers and their negatives and zero. So 5 is a natural number and negative 5 is its negative. That makes it an integer.
Natural integer valued sequences.
No. The set of integer includes negative integers which are not natural numbers..