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The number 6.941 contains digits following a decimal point, therefore it is not a whole number.
Mixed numbers contain whole numbers and fractions
an integer
I assume you mean a set that contains a single whole number. Yes, you can have sets with zero elements, one element, two elements, etc.; so a set which contains a single number is perfectly valid.
1/10
one thousand. Unless you count "one hundred and one" as including the letter a.
Yes, 15 is a whole number.
It contains whole number plus fraction of 1, so its a mixed number.
The number 6.941 contains digits following a decimal point, therefore it is not a whole number.
Opposites
Mixed numbers contain whole numbers and fractions
It is a mixed fraction.
Hey first try to be clear. What do you mean? The first whole number is 0.
an integer
I assume you mean a set that contains a single whole number. Yes, you can have sets with zero elements, one element, two elements, etc.; so a set which contains a single number is perfectly valid.
1/10
Whole numbers are usually defined as the number 0,1,2,3,4,5,6.... where "...." means it goes on forever. These are the natural numbers with the number 0 added to them. So the natural numbers are 1,2,3,4,5,6...The integers are all the whole number and all the negatives of the natural numbers....-4,-3,-2,-1,0,1,2,3,4...So every whole number is an integer.Every natural number is an integer.Every integer is NOT a whole number. ( look at -2)Every integer is NOT a natural number. ( look at -3)The set of integers contains the set of natural numbers and contains the set of whole numbers.The set of whole numbers contains the set of natural numbers.