There's no rule here, it depends on the size of the numbers.
-3 + 4 = 1
-4 + 3 = -1
An integer is a whole number. Adding a integer would just mean to add a whole number.
A negative integer is any whole number which is negative. For example -3 is a negative integer because it's a whole number and it's negative. However -3.24 would not be a negative integer because it's not whole. 3 would not be a negative integer either because it's positive rather than negative.
The negative integer of a debt of 20 would be -20.
No, because if the positive was 8, and the negative was -4, the difference would be positive four.
Adding a negative integer is like subtracting a positive one. If you accept that 7 - 7 = 0 (because anything minus itself equals zero) then it stands to reason that 7 + -7 would equal zero as well.
No. It would NEVER be negative.
positive
-1.5 would be a negative non-integer.
An integer is a whole number. Adding a integer would just mean to add a whole number.
A negative integer is any whole number which is negative. For example -3 is a negative integer because it's a whole number and it's negative. However -3.24 would not be a negative integer because it's not whole. 3 would not be a negative integer either because it's positive rather than negative.
The least non negative integer would be 1.
The negative integer of a debt of 20 would be -20.
No, because if the positive was 8, and the negative was -4, the difference would be positive four.
No, because if the positive was 8, and the negative was -4, the difference would be positive four.
A positive integer would just be a regular number like 2. A negative integer is a negative number like -2. (2 below zero)
-0.8 would not be an integer because it is a decimal and decimals are not integers. An integer is a whole number negative or positive.
Adding a negative integer is like subtracting a positive one. If you accept that 7 - 7 = 0 (because anything minus itself equals zero) then it stands to reason that 7 + -7 would equal zero as well.