yes because you can always put a whole number over something (the definition of an irrational number being that it can not go over something) for example you can say 1/1 which proves that 1 is a rational number.
The sets of integers and whole numbers are completely contained in the set comprising rational numbers.
The set of rational numbers includes all whole numbers, so SOME rational numbers will also be whole number. But not all rational numbers are whole numbers. So, as a rule, no, rational numbers are not whole numbers.
Whole numbers ARE rational.
Some rational numbers are whole numbers, some are not. The set of whole numbers is a proper subset of rational numbers.
soem rational numbers are whole numbers
All rational numbers are not whole numbers, as rational numbers can include fractions.
Whole numbers are always rational
For example, 0 is an integer and whole number that is rational
Whole numbers are the same as integers. Whole numbers are a proper subset of rational numbers.
No. No irrational numbers are whole, and all whole numbers are rational.
Rational numbers. Whole numbers are numbers such as 1, 10, 25, etc.
-3 is a real, rational, whole integer. But then, -- All integers are real rational whole numbers. -- All whole numbers are real rational integers. -- All rational numbers are real. -- All counting numbers are real, rational, whole integers.