It depends, many people do count 0 as a natural number, but MOST do not.
So for most HS text book, the answer is NO, all whole numbers are not natural numbers and the reason is 0 is a whole number but not a natural number.
all whole numbers are natural numbers'
true
All whole numbers are natural numbers.
False
True
True
FALSE
false -apex life
That depends - unfortunately, "whole number" is ambiguous, and can mean different things to different people. If by "whole number" you mean "natural number", then both are of course the same. If you choose to include negative numbers in your definition of "whole number", i.e., whole numbers = integers, then the two sets are not the same, and the proposed statement is false.
That's false.
true
Yes. You know this is true because you learned a process-- an "algorithm"--for adding two numbers together, and if you start with two whole numbers, the result is also a whole number.
False
true
the set of whole numbers include zero but the natural numbers do not? true or false
The is false. "the whole number" is a single number while "the set of natural numbers" is a set. A single number cannot be equal to a set.
False.
There is some disagreement. Some people include zero in the set of natural numbers (like whole numbers), some people don't (like counting numbers).
It is true.
True.
True.
Yes, it is true.
i for one believe it is false
True. Zero is in the set of whole numbers, integers, rational numbers and real numbers but not natural numbers. Natural numbers are often referred to as the "counting numbers" or how you learned to count. When we are teaching little children numbers, we never start with zero or negative numbers - just 1, 2, 3...