No. Only the whole numbers greater than zero are positive integers.
1, 2, 4, 989, 589595, 1000000 are positive integers.
0.5, pi, 1.99, 1000.0001 are positive numbers but they are not positive integers.
0 is an integer, but it is neither positive nor negative.
No.
Every positive integer greater than 1.
No. They have different number of factors
Yes, a composite number is a positive integer which has a positive divisor other than one or itself. By definition, every integer greater than one is either a prime number or a composite number and since 2 is the only even prime number the result is every number greater than 2 is a composite number
Every counting number IS an integer.
No, not every negative number is an integer. For example, -11/2 is not an integer. However, -1, -2, -3, and so on, are negative integers. Perhaps that is what you meant to ask. The negative of every positive integer is a negative integer.
Every positive integer greater than 1 is either prime or composite.
By definition, every integer greater than one is either a prime or a composite number. Indeed, a composite number is defined to be a positive integer which has a positive divisor other than one or itself. And a prime number is defined to be a integer greater than one which has the contrary property (exactly two divisors - one and itself). So any number greater than one is either composite or prime. Among the natural numbers, it remains the number 1, which is neither composite nor prime. 0 is composite, since has all positive integer as divisors.
10 is greater, but so is every other number greater than10!
Every positive integer greater than 1 can be expressed as the product of a unique set of prime factors. The count of these factors is the prime factors number for the number.
Zero is Greater than every negative integer
A composite number is a positive integer which has a positive divisor other than one or itself. In other words, if 0 < n is an integer and there are integers 1 < a, b < n such that n = a × b then n is composite. By definition, every integer greater than one is either a prime number or a composite number. The number one is a unit - it is neither prime nor composite. For example, the integer 14 is a composite number because it can be factored as 2 × 7.