Yes, but only if the second integer is not zero.
The quotient of two nonzero integers is the definition of a rational number. There are nonzero numbers other than integers (imaginary, rational non-integers) that the quotient of would not be a rational number. If the two nonzero numbers are rational themselves, then the quotient will be rational. (For example, 4 divided by 2 is 2: all of those numbers are rational).
It is an incomplete definition of a rational number.
A rational number
Yes.
If a number can be expressed as the quotient of two numbers (a ÷ b) and b is not zero, then it is a rational number.
They are called a rational number.
a rational number
It is a rational number.
Rational
It is a rational number.
The definition of a rational number is the quotient of any two nonzero integers.
No.The definition of a rational number is a number that can be written as the quotient of two integers (and the divisor is not zero).The definition of an irrational number is a real number that cannot be written as the quotient of two integers (and the divisor is not zero).A number can either be written as the quotient of two integers or it can't. One or the other.A number cannot be both rational and irrational.