-10
They have the same absolute value since they are the same distance from zero but they are 38 away from being the same number.
The same as a US National Long Distance Call, just 1 (area code) and telephone number. Ex. 1 (809) 220-1111
Yes, if the fax is being sent to a long distance number. You dial a fax number on a fax machine exactly the same way that you would dial the same telephone number on a landline telephone at the same location. If the phone line you have the fax machine connected to cannot call long distance, then the fax machine will not be able to send a fax to a number outside your local calling area.
In addition to being divided into area codes, the United States is also divided into areas called LATAs, which do not correspond to area code boundaries. After the breakup of the Bell System, a toll call within the same LATA was handled by your local carrier, but a toll call to a different LATA had to be handed off to your long-distance carrier. If you are trying to call a number in the same area code and get a recording that you need a long-distance company access code, most likely you are trying to call a number that is in a different LATA.
any integer and the negative of that integer... for example 3 and -3 are the same distance from 0
Burglars! acutly the reall answer is; The catcher and the umpire
Absolute value
Answer: .5
These two numbers are:* At opposite sides of the number zero, and* At the same distance from the number zero.
It depends where you fly to. The reason they call them One Pass Miles isbecause they give you the same number of miles as the distance you fly.
They represent the same distance from zero on the number line.
Assuming it is the same distance, the distance in metres will be a larger number than the distance in kilometres - but the two distances will still be the same.