Accountants use those pointy parentheses that look like this: <> to indicate negative numbers. If your account reads <14.25> it means you owe $14.25
Form 6251 is the alternative minimum tax for individuals form. As with all federal tax form lines asking to combine the entries on various lines, a number in parentheses is a negative number and is subtracted from positive numbers. If all you have is negative numbers, then those entries are added together. Their total then is entered within parentheses, because the total of all negative numbers is a negative number. Several lines on the 2008 Form 6251 are required by the instructions to be entered as negative numbers. That's why parentheses are included in the form on lines 6, 7, 8, 25, and 28.
The balance on your Macey's card statement will read a credit (negative number) until further charges bring it back to a positive number. If the amount is substantial you may be able to ask for a refund.
BAC stands for Buyer Agency Commission. The number on the BAC field represents the amount of commission the buyer agent will receive.
Typical components on a Customer Statement: Date of Statement Customer Name & Address Customer Number/Account Number Detail of charges for the month (or other period) such as: date of invoice, invoice number, invoice amount. Beginning Balance Current Charges Payments Received Balance Due (Current and Past Due)
You cannot. An ATM card number and the corresponding bank account number are seldom the same. The only way to find it is to use the correct PIN number for that ATM card and then try to get a mini statement advice from the ATM machine. The bank statement will contain the account number linked to this ATM card.
If I read the word "and" as "a", then a negative number in parentheses is a negative number.
the number is negative.
Yes on some calculators it will make a difference.
No. Parentheses have no direct effect on the sign of a number.
This means you have a negative balance.
by either putting the negative number first, or by putting the negative number in parentheses. Like this: -9*1=-9 1*(-9)=-9
-3^2 = 9 -(3^2) = -9
Too many variables to really answer. The context of the number is critical. Is it an Area Code? Is it a negative number on a bank statement? Is it referencing a footnote in a book? Is it following a number such as one (1)? The meaning is entirely dependant on the context. ______________________________________________________________________ Another answer would be that if a number in parentheses is right next to another number, then you are to multiply both numbers if it's a math problem. In some graph tables, f(x) replaces y. Variables, letters that replace numbers, can also be in parentheses.
depends ...... a. 7(-3) means 7 times (negative 3) b. (-1) negative # c. -(9) the opposite of nine
Numeratorjust some extras.... natural number, n-fold rotation symmetry, n-gon, negation of a statement, negative integer, negative number, nested parentheses, net, network, node, nonagon, nonconvex set, non-Eclidean geometry, nonoverlapping regions, null set, number line, numerator, numerical expression.
Putting a negative number in parentheses merely assists a subtraction sum involving negative numbers. For example, 14 - (-17) = 31.
Form 6251 is the alternative minimum tax for individuals form. As with all federal tax form lines asking to combine the entries on various lines, a number in parentheses is a negative number and is subtracted from positive numbers. If all you have is negative numbers, then those entries are added together. Their total then is entered within parentheses, because the total of all negative numbers is a negative number. Several lines on the 2008 Form 6251 are required by the instructions to be entered as negative numbers. That's why parentheses are included in the form on lines 6, 7, 8, 25, and 28.