Yes, the intersection of non-negative (positive) and non-positive (negative) integers is zero.
Negative integers, zero and the positive integers, together form the set of integers.
no, because zero is the thing between integers that seperates negative from possitive.
No. "Natural numbers" only refers to integers greater or equal to zero, that is, non-negative integers.
They are called integers. Fractions and decimals are NOT integers, even if it has a positive or negative sign.
The product of two integers will be: * Zero, if one factor, or both, are zero. * Positive, if both factors have the same sign (both positive, or both negative) * Negative, if the two factors have different signs. Actually, these rules apply to all real numbers, not just to integers.
Zero is neither postive or negative .
Non-positive integers are zero and the negative integers.
An integer is either positive (non-negative), or negative, or zero. There are no negative non-negative integers.
Their quotient is positive if the integers have the same sign;negative if the integers have different signs;zero if the dividend is zero (and the divisor is not).
When the quotient of two integers is positive, either both integers are positive or both negative. When the quotient of two integers is negative, one of the integers is positive and one negative. When the quotient of two integers is zero, the first integer is zero and the second one is anything but zero.
Negative integers, zero and the positive integers, together form the set of integers.
It may be either. If any of the integers is zero, the product will be zero. Else, if one or three of the integers is negative, the product will be negative. Otherwise, it will be positive.
Neither. It is in between positive and negative but it is still an integer.
The set of integers is divided into three subsets. One is the positive integers. Another is the negative integers. The last subset has one element -- zero. In sum, integers are composed of the positive integers, the negative integers, and zero.
Negative, zero and positive.
negative
Positive integers are greater than zero, negative integers are less than zero. The set of positive integers is closed under multiplication (and form a group), the set of negative integers is not.