yes However, integer is a representation of a whole number that does not use fractions or decimals. A floating point number may represent a whole number, but not be an integer. So 23 is a whole number, 23 is an integer, but 23.00 is a floating point number, not an integer.
All integers are whole numbers
You seem to be terribly confused about singular and plural nouns, and about the indefinite article! You may think that grammar does not matter but it does: people will judge you by how literate you are. So I suggest that for your own sake, you work on it!
A whole numbers is an integers.
No, for example -12. All negative integers are not whole numbers.
Note that 12 IS a whole number, and every integer is either a whole number or the additive inverse of a whole number.
No, it's not
* * * * *
It is.
Yes. The definition of an integer is a whole number.
Yes, although they can be expressed as fractions: 2/1, 6/2 etc.
Yes.
Yes it is.
Yes, it is.
No, but every whole is a integer. integers are - and +. whole number are only +.
Yes.Yes. The definition of integer is basically 'a whole number.'
For any integer, there is a whole number that is bigger, and for any whole number, there is a integer that is bigger.
There is no such number: every whole number is an integer.
Yes, it is true that every whole number is an integer.
Every whole number IS an integer so the question is misguided.
Yes, but not every integer is a whole number. (Negative integers are not whole numbers.)
There is no such number since every integer is a whole number.
Every whole number or integer has 1 as a factor.
All whole numbers are rational.
Yes, every whole number is an integer. Whole Numbers: 0, 1, 2, 3, ... Integers: ..., -3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3, ... Every whole number is in the set of integers. However an integer is not necessarily a whole number, as whole numbers do not include negative numbers.
They are not "ingerts"! Every whole number is an integer (and conversely) because that is how they are defined.