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Irrational. The square root of a positive integer is either an integer (that is, if the integer is a perfect square), or an irrational number.
For a start, the square root of any integer is either an integer, or an irrational number.
No. The square root of an integer is always either an integer or an irrational number.
Yes. The square root of a natural number (positive integer) is either an integer, or an irrational number.
The square root of 2 is irrational. In general, the square root of a positive integer is either an integer (if you take the square root of a perfect square), or it is irrational.
Irrational. The square root of a positive integer is either an integer, or an irrational number.
No. The square root of an integer is either an integer, or an irrational number.
Irrational. The square root of a positive integer is either an integer (that is, if the integer is a perfect square), or an irrational number.
The square root of 61 is an irrational number
For a start, the square root of any integer is either an integer, or an irrational number.
No. The square root of an integer is always either an integer or an irrational number.
It can be either.
Yes. The square root of a natural number (positive integer) is either an integer, or an irrational number.
The square root of 27 is an irrational number
Yes. The square root of any positive integer can only be either an integer (if the number, for example 49, happens to be a perfect square), or an irrational number.
The square root of 2 is irrational. In general, the square root of a positive integer is either an integer (if you take the square root of a perfect square), or it is irrational.
No, it isn't. Any square root of an integer is either an integer itself, or irrational.