Zero counts as neither positive nor negative.
It is a neutral integer
Any integer, other than 0, has a positive as well as a negative version. -0 is the same as +0, and so the two are treated as a single number.
When the positive integer is farther from 0 than the negative integer, example -4+5=1 why? the -4 is 4 places to the left of the 0 and the 5 is 5 places to the right.
Yes the integer group includes negative numbers, positive numbers, and 0.
Integers are all whole numbers, both negative and positive (< 0, >0)
When they are added together and the absolute value of the positive integer is bigger than the absolute value of the negative integer or when the negative integer is subtracted from the positive integer.
Any integer, other than 0, has a positive as well as a negative version. -0 is the same as +0, and so the two are treated as a single number.
It is neither negative nor positive
0 Zero
When the positive integer is farther from 0 than the negative integer, example -4+5=1 why? the -4 is 4 places to the left of the 0 and the 5 is 5 places to the right.
no, integer is 0 or positive / negative whole number
Yes the integer group includes negative numbers, positive numbers, and 0.
No, 0 is neither positive nor negative it is just 0
a negative integer is -1,-2,-3 and so on, but not -2.5 or 0 a positive integer is 1, 2, 3 and so on but not 7.2 or 0
Yes. The product of a negative integer and a positive integer is a negative integer.
When the positive integer is greater than the negative integer.
When they are added together and the absolute value of the positive integer is bigger than the absolute value of the negative integer or when the negative integer is subtracted from the positive integer.
Integers are all whole numbers, both negative and positive (< 0, >0)