The term is "positive".
greater than zero! Sure, it is correct, but not clear the reason
no zero is greater
In a decreasing sequence that approaches zero, each term is less than or equal to the previous term and converges to zero. Since the sequence is decreasing and approaches zero, the terms cannot dip below zero; otherwise, the sequence would not be approaching zero but would instead be diverging negatively. Therefore, every term must be greater than or equal to zero, as they cannot be less than zero while still converging to zero. Thus, all terms in the sequence are non-negative.
Yes, one is greater than zero.
All positive numbers are greater than zero.
Since there are no negative signs, and the expression is clearly not equal to zero, it's greater than zero.
Any positive number is greater than zero.
Zero is Greater than every negative integer
A number greater than zero is any numerical value that is larger than zero on the number line. In mathematical terms, this is represented as any real number that is positive. This includes integers, fractions, decimals, and irrational numbers that are greater than zero.
True. A polynomial of degree zero is defined as a polynomial where the highest degree term has a degree of zero. This means that the polynomial is a constant term, as it does not contain any variables raised to a power greater than zero. Therefore, a polynomial of degree zero is indeed a constant term.
4/5 is greater than zero - it equals 0.8
Positive numbers, otherwise known as real numbers.