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It belongs to the set of negative rational numbers, negative real numbers, fractionall numbers, rational numbers, real numbers.
No. The set of whole numbers does not include negative numbers. There are 11 integers in that range.
The set of numbers that consists of the positive numbers, the negative numbers, and zero are integers. There are no fractions in integers.
Actually the set of integers is the same as the set of whole numbers since the whole numbers include negative whole numbers and zero.
It is the set of all numbers excluding zero.
No. Whole numbers are counting numbers and zero.
No. For a set to be closed with respect to an operation, the result of applying the operation to any elements of the set also must be in the set. The set of negative numbers is not closed under multiplication because, for example (-1)*(-2)=2. In that example, we multiplied two numbers that were in the set (negative numbers) and the product was not in the set (it is a positive number). On the other hand, the set of all negative numbers is closed under the operation of addition because the sum of any two negative numbers is a negatoive number.
The set of integers, the set of rational numbers, the set of real numbers, the set of complex numbers, ...
its a collection of negative numbers only, zero and all positive numbers are not included.
Of the "standard sets" -10 belongs to: ℤ⁻ (the negative integers) ℤ (the integers) ℚ⁻ (the negative rational numbers) ℚ (the rational numbers) ℝ⁻ (the negative real numbers) ℝ (the real numbers) ℂ (the complex numbers) (as ℤ ⊂ ℚ ⊂ ℝ ⊂ ℂ). Other sets are possible, eg the even numbers.
-2 - (-5) = -2 + +5 = +3. (+3 is not in the set of negative numbers.)
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