A negative non integer is a number like -.5. It is a negative number but it is not an integer (integers are numbers like -3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3)
a non-negative integer is a positive integer Example: -2 = 2 -35 = 35
Yes. "Integer" includes positive numbers, negative numbers, and zero.
Let's use N to represent any number.N x N = NN x -N = -N-N x -N = NSo the rules are:A positive integer times a positive integer will be a positive integerA positive integer times a negative integer will be a negative integerA negative integer times a negative integer will be a positive integer.
positive times negative equals negative
Always positive. For example, -3 divided by -1 = +3, because there are THREE lots of -1 in -3.
A negative integer is any whole number which is negative. For example -3 is a negative integer because it's a whole number and it's negative. However -3.24 would not be a negative integer because it's not whole. 3 would not be a negative integer either because it's positive rather than negative.
No, -3 + 8 = 5.
a negative integer is -1,-2,-3 and so on, but not -2.5 or 0 a positive integer is 1, 2, 3 and so on but not 7.2 or 0
No, not every negative number is an integer. For example, -11/2 is not an integer. However, -1, -2, -3, and so on, are negative integers. Perhaps that is what you meant to ask. The negative of every positive integer is a negative integer.
A negative integer.
Technically, yes. -3, a negative integer, can be written as -3/1 or -6/2 which are fractions.
A negative non integer is a number like -.5. It is a negative number but it is not an integer (integers are numbers like -3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3)
Sometimes. For example: (-4) - (-3) = -1 (-4) - (-4) = 0 (-4) - (-5) = 1
yes
Yes.
-3