Positive integers are greater than zero. Negative integers are less than zero.
An integer is a whole number, with no decimal or fraction part. For example, 4 and 85 are integers. 3.9 and 1/2 are not integers. Greater than zero means positive numbers. Thus integers greater than zero are 1, 2, 3, 4 and so on.
Yes, but greater than all negative integers
Zero is greater than negative one.
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.
These are positive integers, usually denoted with the symbol (+) the number. Check the video on youtube Ordering Integers.
First of all, there's no such thing as an "interger". You're talking about "integers". The integers less than zero and greater than -7 are: -6 -5 -4 -3 -2 and -1
Yes, by definition all positive integers are whole numbers.
Of course they can. Every integer greater than zero is a square root.
Yes, by definition all positive integers are whole numbers.
Whole numbers are integers greater than or equal to zero.
Not exactly. All positive integers are greater than all negative integers, but -1 is greater than -7 even though -7 is farther from zero. It's better to think of a number line. Things get greater as you move to the right, lesser as you move to the left.