Any integer, whether it is positive or negative, is a rational number.
-3 is a rational number
-2/3 is a rational number
A rational number is any number that is not irrational - that is, it can be designated with numbers (2, -5, 0, 1/3, 0.14, etc.) A non-negative rational number number is exactly what it sounds like. It's any rational number that is not negative.
No. An irrational number is any number that is not a rational number; A rational number is any number that can be expressed as one integer over another integer. negative 3 over 4 is one integer (negative 3) over another integer (4), and so is a rational number.
-7/3 is a negative rational number.
It is a negative number. It is also a rational number; also, it's a real number.
It is the positive value of that rational number.
It is a real rational negative integer number whose value is -3
-3/4
No, -5 is a negative, rational number.
'-3' is RATIONAL. IRRATIONAL numbers are those where the decimals go to inifinity AND there is no regular order in the decimal digits. e.g. pi = 3.141592..... is IRRATIONAL but 1/3 = 0.3333.... is RATIONAL. NB Both go to infinity, but '1/3' has the decimals in a regular order .
Any rational positive number is still rational when you make the same number negative.