A negative non integer is a number like -.5. It is a negative number but it is not an integer (integers are numbers like -3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3)
a non-negative integer is a positive integer Example: -2 = 2 -35 = 35
Yes. "Integer" includes positive numbers, negative numbers, and zero.
Let's use N to represent any number.N x N = NN x -N = -N-N x -N = NSo the rules are:A positive integer times a positive integer will be a positive integerA positive integer times a negative integer will be a negative integerA negative integer times a negative integer will be a positive integer.
A non-positive integer is a negative integer. The term refers to any integer (a number that has no decimal part) that is less than zero.It means that it is an integer (whole number), and that it isn't positive. In other words, that includes zero, and negative integers.
Always positive. For example, -3 divided by -1 = +3, because there are THREE lots of -1 in -3.
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.
No, -3 + 8 = 5.
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.
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
A negative integer.
Technically, yes. -3, a negative integer, can be written as -3/1 or -6/2 which are fractions.
A negative non integer is a number like -.5. It is a negative number but it is not an integer (integers are numbers like -3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3)
Sometimes. For example: (-4) - (-3) = -1 (-4) - (-4) = 0 (-4) - (-5) = 1
Yes.
yes
-3