They are the integers.
Integers are defined as whole numbers.
The whole numbers include the counting numbers, plus zero.
No, not every number is a whole number. Whole numbers include zero and all positive integers, but do not include any fractions, decimals, or negative numbers.
No. Every rational number is not a whole number but every whole number is a rational number. Rational numbers include integers, natural or counting numbers, repeating and terminating decimals and fractions, and whole numbers.
Whole numbers include the number 0 and counting numbers do not.
Integers are defined as whole numbers.
The whole numbers include the counting numbers, plus zero.
No, not every number is a whole number. Whole numbers include zero and all positive integers, but do not include any fractions, decimals, or negative numbers.
Yes. Alternative answer: No, -1 is not a whole number. The whole numbers are 0 and the positive integers, but do not include negative integers.
No. Every rational number is not a whole number but every whole number is a rational number. Rational numbers include integers, natural or counting numbers, repeating and terminating decimals and fractions, and whole numbers.
A whole number does not include a fraction or decimal part. For example, 3, 107, -9 and zero are whole numbers. 2.1, -17,4528765 and two-and-a-half are not whole numbers.
Yes.
No. Whole numbers include 1, 2, 3, 4, ... .
Whole numbers include the number 0 and counting numbers do not.
A whole number is a number that cannot be broken down into parts and is not continuous. It represents a single discrete object. Whole numbers include the positive integers or natural numbers and zero.
100 and above...numbers never end! * * * * * Rubbish answer! Any negative integer is a whole number but not a natural number. Some people include 0, others do not.
Natural numbers are sometimes defined to include zero, sometimes not. Equivalent terms therefore may include: positive integers, non-negative integers, whole numbers, positive whole numbers ("whole number" is ambiguous; some take it to include negative numbers, some not).