Yes, it is.
No. All positive numbers are greater than zero and all negative numbers are less than zero. Therefore, all positive numbers are greater than all negative numbers. That said, there is a such thing as absolute value, which is how far a number is from zero. For example the absolute value of -10 is 10. The absolute value of a negative number can be greater than that of a positive number.
No. All negative numbers are less than zero.
No. All numbers greater than zero are positive real numbers. Integers are whole numbers (positive or negative) and therefore, don't include numbers with decimals.
yes because a negative number is lower then zero a positive number is high then zero. ie: 200000 > -200000
A negative number is defined as a number that is less than zero. Positive numbers, on the other hand, are more than zero. You can see that positive numbers are greater than negative numbers because they are all above zero, which negative numbers are not.
Zero (0) is the center of the number line. The left side is the negative numbers while the right-hand side is the positive numbers. Negative numbers closer to Zero are greater than the numbers away from it. Ex. -1 is greater than -2. All positive numbers are all greater than negative numbers. Hence, 2 is greater than -2. Check the video of Tser Jords about ordering integers.
No. Zero is neither positive nor negative, by definition. A positive number is greater than zero. A negative number is less than zero. Although, zero is a non-negative number (a set that includes all positive numbers and zero).
Natural numbers consist of the set of all whole numbers greater than zero.
An integer. Integers are all of the whole numbers, all of the negative whole numbers, and zero.
All positive numbers are greater than all negative numbers.
All positive numbers are greater than zero.
All numbers have common factors greater than zero.