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Q: How do you write sets of numbers for negative integers?
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Name the sets of numbers to which negative 10 belongs?

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.


How does the set of whole numbers differ from the set of integers?

Integers include negative numbers.


What sets of numbers does -17 belong?

belongs to an infinite number of sets. For example, the Real Numbers, the Rational Numbers, Integers, negative integers, odd negative integers, negative primes numbers, the set {12, -17, 98} or {2.76, pi, -17, k, wikianswers}. In fact any collection, however random, of numbers or other things, that includes -17.


What set is the union of the sets of non negative integers and negative integers?

It is a universal set


The whole numbers combined with the negative numbers?

The answer depends onwhat you mean by negative numbers: negative integers, negative rationals, or negative reals?what you mean by "combined with". The union of sets, a sum, multiple or some other Cartesian or cross product.


What sets of numbers are closed under addition?

I know that whole numbers, integers, negative numbers, positive numbers, and even numbers are. Anyone feel free to correct me.


What are the sets of integers and cite examples?

The set of integers is a set that includes all the positive whole numbers, all the negative whole numbers and zero. If you think in terms of sets within that set (or sub-sets) there are an infinity. Of course the obvious subset is the set of natural numbers. Natural numbers are the positive integers used for counting eg 1, 2, 3, etc.


Which of the following sets of numbers contains multiplicative inverses for all its nonzero elements?

Please don't write "the following" if you don't provide a list. This is the situation for some common number sets:* Whole numbers / integers do NOT have this property. * Rational numbers DO have this property. * Real numbers DO have this property. * Complex numbers DO have this property. * The set of non-negative rational numbers, as well as the set of non-negative real numbers, DO have this property.


What set of numbers does the number -6 belong to?

It belongs to infinitely many sets. Some notable sets to which it belongs include:* Integers * Negative integers * Rational numbers * Real numbers * Complex numbers


Are integers and natural numbers equivalent sets?

No, they are not equivalent sets.


Name set which -10 belongs Ex-whole integers rational?

Negative integers, integers, negative rationals, rationals, negative reals, reals, complex numbers are some sets with specific names. There are lots more test without specific names to which -10 belongs.


Which of the following sets of numbers contains multiplicative inverses for all its elements Positive Integers Integers Rational Numbers Real Numbers?

Rational numbers and Real Numbers. The multiplicative inverses of integers are not integers.