No.
That is a result of an absolute value equation. So an Absolute Value Graph
Absolute value of -9 is 9.
The absolute value of -0.5 is 0.5
It is a negative if the negative number has the higher absolute value and positive if the positive number has the higher absolute value.
It is sometimes the point where the value inside the absolute function is zero.
the line goes down from left to right as the absolute value of the negative slope get bigger, the graph of the line gets steeper as the absolute value of the negative slope gets smaller, the graph of the line gets less steep ( apex )
That is a result of an absolute value equation. So an Absolute Value Graph
An absolute value can not be negative.
The absolute value of e, without any other transformations, would simply be e, since ex cannot take on negative values.
If the absolute value of the negative is bigger than that of the positive, then the answer is negative. If the absolute value of the negative is the same, then zero. If the absolute value of the negative is smaller, then positive. Absolute value is the value ignoring the sign.
The opposite is: negative (the absolute value of negative 30).
Absolute values are always positive; so graph it on the positive side of the number line.
No, an absolute value must be non-negative.
The absolute value becomes negative.
the absolute value of negative 7 is 7 and the absolute value of 7 is also seven so they are equal. Therefore, the absolute value of negative 7 is not less than the absolute value of 7. Remember that absolute value means the positive of a number
An absolute value can never be a negative. An absolute value is just the distance the # is from the zero...so again for it to be negative thats not possible
No. The absolute value of negative nine is greater than the absolute value of 3.