Yes, the absolute value for an negative number is always positive.
Yes, absolute value is a number that is a whole number and it is non-negative.
No. You have it backwards . . . . . the absolute value of a negative number is always a positive number.
No. The absolute value of a number is the value of the number ignoring the sign - it is always positive: The absolute value of a negative number is a positive number; The absolute value of a positive number is a positive number.
The absolute value will always be positive because if you think about it, the absolute value.
Well, honey, the absolute value of a number is always positive, no matter what. It's like a magnet that repels negativity. So, no, it can't be both positive and negative at the same time. It's just not how math works, sweetie.
perhapsAnother AnswerThis is not true. Every positive number is equal to its absolute value. Every negative number will be smaller than its absolute value.
If you are taking the absolute value of a negative number, that number will always be positive. So the opposite of the absolute value of -7 would be -7.
No. The absolute value is the distance a number is from zero. It is always represented by a positive number. The absolute value of any positive number and its negative counterpart is the same.
no number; absolute value is always positive. The absolute value of a negative number is positive. For example absolute value of -4 is +4
+35 The absolute value of any number is always positive
Yes. An absolute value is just that- the ultimate magnitude of a number, the number's distance from zero. Since distance is always positive, absolute value is always positive.