No, they cannot.
No, most cannot.
Positive integers, if I understood you correctly
211
you can say that 2/10 of every 10 integers is divisible by 5, so multiplying 2/10 by 100, giving you 200/1000 total integers are divisible by 5. half of all integers are odd, so divide 200/1000 by 2 is 100/1000, so you can correctly state that 100 odd integers under 1000 are divisible by 5.
You can use the same symbols that you use to compare integers or decimals: equal, greater than, greater-than-or-equal, etc.
Negative integers, zero and the positive integers, together form the set of integers.
2436 and 1624 are integers, not fractions. And, as integers, they are unequal.2436 and 1624 are integers, not fractions. And, as integers, they are unequal.2436 and 1624 are integers, not fractions. And, as integers, they are unequal.2436 and 1624 are integers, not fractions. And, as integers, they are unequal.
Non-positive integers are zero and the negative integers.
Are you sure you typed this correctly? Using normal methods this not factorable -- it si PRIME for the integers. You can use the quadratic formula, but that gives irrational answers for this quadratic.
The set of integers represents the integers.
At least the following families: all integers; all positive integers; all odd integers; and all "square integers", that is, integers that are squares of other integers.
The set of integers is divided into three subsets. One is the positive integers. Another is the negative integers. The last subset has one element -- zero. In sum, integers are composed of the positive integers, the negative integers, and zero.