Yes!
Because all whole numbers are rational. 10 can be written as 10/1.
No. There is no such thing as a "largest number". Gogoolplex is a finite number. If you add one to a finite number, you get a larger number. In the case of an infinite number, if you raise 2 to the power of such a number, you get a larger number.
All whole numbers are rational. 10 = 10/1, as a ratio
10 and a half, being between the whole numbers 10 and 11, can't be a whole number itself.
Yes. A rational number can be written as a fraction. All integers can be written as themselves over one--as fractions.
2520
10 if you are counting whole numbers.
Yes. -10 = -10/1 which is of the form of one whole number over another whole number. Rational numbers have the form of one whole number over another whole number. Thus -10 is rational.
Every whole number that ends in 0 is evenly divisible by 10.
A finite set is a set that contains a limited or countable number of elements. For example, the set of natural numbers from 1 to 10 is a finite set because it has exactly ten elements. In contrast, an infinite set has no bounds and contains an uncountable number of elements, such as the set of all natural numbers. Finite sets can be characterized by their cardinality, which is a measure of the number of elements in the set.
To find the whole numbers less than 100 that are 10 greater than an odd whole number, we start by identifying the odd whole numbers less than 90 (since 90 + 10 = 100). The odd whole numbers in this range are 1, 3, 5, ..., 89. For each of these odd numbers, adding 10 gives us the corresponding whole numbers: 11, 13, 15, ..., 99. Thus, the whole numbers less than 100 that meet the criteria are all the odd numbers from 11 to 99.
A whole number has an odd number of unique factors if and only if it is a perfect square. The perfect squares less than 10 are 0, 1, 4, and 9. Therefore, there are four whole numbers less than 10 that have an odd number of unique factors.