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It is irrational.
from another wikianswers page: say that 'a' is rational, and that 'b' is irrational. assume that a + b equals a rational number, called c. so a + b = c subtract a from both sides. you get b = c - a. but c - a is a rational number subtracted from a rational number, which should equal another rational number. However, b is an irrational number in our equation, so our assumption that a + b equals a rational number must be wrong.
I would say no, it is rational. A number is only irrational if it repeats with no specific pattern.
A real number is an irrational number if it cannot be expressed as a fraction a/b, where a and b are integers. Most real numbers are irrational. The most well known irrational numbers are π and √2. The inverse condition are called the rational numbers.
The irrational number closest to 6 is the square root of 36, which equals 6. This is because the square root of 36 is a rational number that is the closest approximation to 6 among irrational numbers. The square root of 36 is equal to 6, making it the irrational number closest to 6.