0 zero
Zero
Add one to the greatest number you can think of. The answer is either or neither. Whole numbers don't stop.
The square root of 200 is not a whole number, and therefore can neither be classified as odd or even.
Decimal numbers generally are not considered to be odd or even. Only integers are odd or even. So on that basis, 3.6 is not an odd number, but neither is it an even number.
0 is to be neither odd or even. But numbers like 10,20 are even. So, 0 is considered even.
Neither, since neither of them is an even number.
An even number can be divided by 2 evenly. An odd number will have a remainder of 1 when divided by 2. 0 is neither.
8.5 is neither odd nor even. Only integers (whole numbers) are called odd or even. All other numbers (like fractions) are neither odd nor even.
Every integer (whole numbers, including positives, negatives, and zero) is either odd or even. No number is both odd and even. Other numbers, such as fractions that don't reduce to an integer, irrational numbers, and pure imaginary numbers are neither odd nor even. Zero is an even number and is not an odd number.
No, and integer is a whole number (ie has neither decimals nor fractions in it) an integer can, however be negative or even imaginary
No. Zero is neither an odd or an even number.
Well, honey, 24.5 is neither even nor odd because it's a decimal number. Even and odd numbers are for whole integers, not for numbers with a decimal point strutting their stuff. So, keep on truckin' with your math questions, but let's leave those decimals out of the even-odd drama, shall we?