No.
No. But all whole numbers are in the set of rational numbers. Natural numbers (ℕ) are a subset of Integers (ℤ), which are a subset of Rational numbers (ℚ), which are a subset of Real numbers (ℝ),which is a subset of the Complex numbers (ℂ).
A whole number is not a set of any kind and so cannot be a subset of rational numbers.
Some rational numbers are whole numbers, some are not. The set of whole numbers is a proper subset of rational numbers.
No, whole numbers are only a small subset of rational numbers.
Counting numbers are a proper subset of whole numbers which are the same as integers which are a proper subset of rational numbers.
Whole numbers are the same as integers. Whole numbers are a proper subset of rational numbers.
Whole numbers and integers are the same. They are a proper subset of rational numbers.
No. There are several real numbers that are not rational (e.g. pi). However, every rational number is also a real number. In general, whole numbers/natural numbers is a subset of the integers (i.e. every whole number is an integer), the integers is a subset of the rationals, the rationals are a subset of the real numbers. I think the real numbers are a subset of the complex numbers, but I'm not 100% positive on that.
Yes.
Natural numbers = Whole numbers are a subset of integers (not intrgers!) which are a subset of rational numbers. Rational numbers and irrational number, together, comprise real numbers.
Which subset of the rational numbers best describes the dimensions of a rectangle
Integers are the same as whole numbers. Integers are a proper subset of rational numbers.