Yes
It is a definitional thing. Counting numbers are whole numbers (integers) starting with 1.
It is: 10
10 if you are counting whole numbers.
It depends on what number you are counting by. If you are counting by halves it would be 10 but if you were counting by 1 decimal it would be 9.6 and so on. Hope this helps, Popgirl33122
4, 20, 25
10 is a 2 bit binary number, when converted to decimal numbers it is 2.
7 is a counting number. But I am not sure what a counting number number is!
The binary number 10 represents 2. The decimal number 10 in binary would be 1010.
sq rt of 81 is 9 sq rt of 100 is 10 sq rt of 83 is between 9 and 10 and thus is not an integer/ counting number
If a timer is counting down from 30, it doesn't actually count 30. It starts counting at 29. If you are counting up to 10, you wouldn't count the number that you are counting from. If you counted 0, you would actually be counting 11 numbers.
A counting number is the numbers you lear as a little kid, counting numbers are one and up. Integers include the counting numbers, 0, and the opposite (negative) of counting numbers. So yes, a counting number or the opposite of a counting number is an integer.
A counting number is the numbers you lear as a little kid, counting numbers are one and up. Integers include the counting numbers, 0, and the opposite (negative) of counting numbers. So yes, a counting number or the opposite of a counting number is an integer.