No, the difference of two positive integers cannot always be negative. In fact, the difference will be negative only when the first integer is smaller than the second. If the first integer is greater than or equal to the second, the difference will be zero or positive.
diffrence will always be positive except when it is zero but is you speak of substraction operation it can be positive negative or zero
That is false. The product of two negative integers is always positive.
No, always positive.
It will always be positive.
No, always negative
diffrence will always be positive except when it is zero but is you speak of substraction operation it can be positive negative or zero
Positive. The product of even numbers of negative integers is always positive, whereas the product of odd nummbers of negative integers is always negative.
No the product of two integers will not always be a positive, because if you multiply a positive and a negative you'll get a negative.
That is false. The product of two negative integers is always positive.
No, always positive.
It will always be negative.
It will always be positive.
always a negative
No, always negative
yes the answer is always a positive
No, a negative integer cannot be greater than a positive integer. By definition, negative integers are to the left of zero on the number line, while positive integers are to the right. Since all negative integers are less than zero, they are always less than any positive integer. Thus, negative integers are always smaller than positive integers.
When you multiply two integers of the same sign, the answer is always positive. A positive times a positive is positive and a negative times a negative is positive.