Yes, by putting them over 1.
No- not exactly. Negative integers are not counting numbers. Positive integers are identified with counting numbers. Many authors like to start with zero as a counting number.
Yes all counting numbers are whole numbers, but the reverse is not true (zero!)
Yes.all counting numbers Have factor.
Would you like to have...1, 1.00001, 1.00002, 1.00003...OR1, 2, 3, 4?If all counting numbers were not whole numbers, what would decimal or fraction numbers be?It would be too hard, making a huge crisis or something, making maths possibly unused.
Would you like to have...1, 1.00001, 1.00002, 1.00003...OR1, 2, 3, 4?If all counting numbers were not whole numbers, what would decimal or fraction numbers be?It would be too hard, making a huge crisis or something, making maths possibly unused.
Negative numbers are not counting numbers. Counting numbers are the integers starting with 1 and then 2 and so forth.
Usually all the integers (counting numbers) from 1 to 100.Usually all the integers (counting numbers) from 1 to 100.Usually all the integers (counting numbers) from 1 to 100.Usually all the integers (counting numbers) from 1 to 100.
Yes all counting numbers are whole numbers, but the reverse is not true (zero!)
no
All counting numbers ARE (not is!) a proper subset of the set of whole numbers.
All of the counting numbers are whole numbers. Counting numbers consist of 1, 2, 3, 4, etc. Whole numbers are numbers that have no fractional parts. Since none have fractional parts, they are all whole numbers.
Yes, they are.