Positive (+) 2. The absolute number of any number is always positive,
2 1 2 is the number with the absolute value of 2 1 2. Absolute number can be defined as the non negative value of that number.
The absolute value of a number is the number without any sign. |-3| = 3 and |2| = 2.
The absolute value of 15 is 15. The absolute value of any positive number is the number itself. The absolute value of any negative number is the number times -1. For example: What is the absolute value of 10? Answer: 10. Example #2: What is the absolute value of -2? Answer: 2.
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No, the absolute value of a number cannot equal a negative number.
The absolute value of a number is the positive (or non-negative) value of the number. The absolute value of 0 or a positive number is the number itself. The absolute value of a negative number is its positive equivalent.
The absolute value of a number is the distance that number is from zero. 2 and -2 are both the same distance from 0, they are 2 away. Therefore, |-2| = 2, and |2| = 2.
The absolute value of a number is a positive number. For example the absolute value of -2 is 2. The absolute value of 4 is 4. So the absoulte value of 25 is 25.
On a number line does 2 or - 2 represent the absolute value of -2?
It is one and one fourth. Absolute value just means how far the number is from 0, so even if the number is negative, for example -2, it is only 2 numbers away from 0. So the absolute value of -2 is 2. TIP: Absolute value = same number, NEVER negative.
No. This is because absolute values are always positive. For example: |2|=2 absolute value Additive inverse means the opposite sign of that number so 2's additive inverse is -2. But sometimes if the number is -2 then the additive inverse equals the absolute value. therefore the answer is sometimes