It depends on what you mean by an opposite. Every real number has an additive opposite but 0 does not have a multiplicative opposite.
opposites somehow like a positive number is the opposite of a negative and a negative number is the opposite of a positive
The question is somewhat ambiguous since you do not define "opposite". If what you are asking is: is the negative of a negative sometimes negative, the answer is: No, never.
no
A negative number. (ex. -9)
never a negative number * * * * * ... true if, by opposite, you mean the additive inverse. However, the multplicative inverse is also an opposite. And the multiplicative inverse of a negative number is always negative.
It depends on what you mean by an opposite. Every real number has an additive opposite but 0 does not have a multiplicative opposite.
It is the sign that is opposite, not the number But if the number magnitude is the same, it is correct to say that ,for example, negative 6 is the opposite of positive six. But negative 4 is not the opposite of negative 8, for example
opposites somehow like a positive number is the opposite of a negative and a negative number is the opposite of a positive
A negative number?
It's opposite is a negative. :P
The question is somewhat ambiguous since you do not define "opposite". If what you are asking is: is the negative of a negative sometimes negative, the answer is: No, never.
Yes, and the opposite holds true as well.
no
no
No.
A negative number is the opposite of a positive number. If a positive number measures the money you have, then a negative number measures the money you owe. If you multiply two negative numbers together, you are getting the opposite of an opposite. One negative negates the other, leaving you with a positive.