Because -1 is negative one.
Yes, zero is technically bigger than negative one.
All numbers between negative one and zero are negative. When you multiply a number by a negative it becomes negative. Also, all numbers between negative one and zero are decimals. When you multiply a number by a decimal it becomes smaller. Thus, when you multiply a rational number by a number between negative one and zero, it becomes smaller and negative.
ZERO!
Negative one is the biggest negative number because it is just one unit away from zero and all other negative whole numbers are further from zero and thus smaller.
Anything multiplied by zero is equal to zero.
Zero is more than, not less than the number negative 1.
Yes. -1 + 0 = -1
yes
Negative one, of course.
Positive one plus negative one equals zero. This is because when you add a number and its opposite, they cancel each other out, resulting in zero.
'Zero-point-zero-zero-zero-five-zero-one', or 'five-hundred-and-one times ten to the negative six'.
The sum of two integers can be positive, negative, or zero, depending on the values of the integers involved. If both integers are positive, their sum is positive. If both are negative, their sum is negative. If one is positive and one is negative, the sum could be positive, negative, or zero, depending on their absolute values.