If you can write the number, then any fraction of it and any multiple of it are all
numbers, and none of them is infinite.
On the other hand ... any fraction of infinity and any multiple of infinity is infinite.
An infinite number. A shape can have an infinite number of sides - half of these numbers will be even and half odd. Half of infinity is still infinity.
half way is 0.665 But they're an infinite amount of them. 0.6666666666666666666666666 0.6543210123456789876543210 Are some examples.
Half of them are acute, and half of them are obtuse. There are an infinite number of them altogether.
2.52 1/25/2Probably infinite number of ways to show this.
The answer in number 8 as sideways 8 means "INFINITE" and half 8 means 0
2/3 or 4/5 or 93/100 There are an infinite number of fractions greater than a half
There are an infinite number of fractions between 0.5 and 1. This is because you can have an infinite number of digits in a fraction between any two numbers. 0.50000000000000001, 0.50000000000000002, etc.
There are an infinite amount of answers to that. 1141.5 is exactly half way between them.
In general, you cannot. An infinite number divided by any non-zero number is still infinite. An infinite number divided by another infinite number may or may not be infinite.
No, nowhere near. Georg Cantor proved that the number of rational numbers is countably infinite whereas the irrationals are uncountably infinite. If you take the number of rationals to be N then the number of irrationals is of the order 2^N.
Infinity. There's an infinite number of place values, so you can create an infinite number of numbers that start with nine. Some of these will be prime, and since there is an infinite number of numbers starting with nine, there is an infinite number of prime numbers that start with 9 as well.
Some finite numbers in a set: the number of digits on your hand, the number of seats on a bus, and the number of people on earth. Some infinite numbers in a set: the number of positive integers and the number of digits in pi.