there are a lot of examples of whole numbers
1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9. . .
Yes, no irrational numbers are whole numbers.
16 x 2 and 4 x 8 are two examples. Among the whole numbers, the possibilities are 1x32, 2x16, and 4x8.
The average of 33 consecutive whole numbers is 58, what is the smallest of these whole numbers? The answer is 42
It depends on your definition of whole numbers. The classic definition of whole numbers is the set of counting numbers and zero. In this case, the set of whole numbers is not closed under subtraction, because 3-6 = -3, and -3 is not a member of this set. However, if you use whole numbers as the set of all integers, then whole numbers would be closed under subtraction.
Including 32 and 53 = 22 whole numbers in betweenNot including 32 and 53 = 20 whole numbers in between
10 11 are not whole numbers
1
Yes, it certainly is! Numbers like 14, 120, 950, and 14007 are examples of whole numbers. Numbers such as 14.5, 27.2 and 9 1/2 (nine and one half) are examples of numbers which are not whole numbers. Another name for a whole number is an "integer".
whole numbers, counting numbers, integers...
the simplest answer to that is that whole numbers do not have decimals or fractions.
Whole numbers refers to numbers that have no decimal or fractional part, such as 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, ... -1, -2, -3, ...
Whole numbers are integers that do not include decimals or fractions as for example the whole numbers in the number line
Non-integers are fractions, decimal numbers, and irrational numbers. Integers are positive and negative whole numbers.
6 is one and multiples of 6
Examples of such numbers are 49, where sqrt(49) = 7, 81, where sqrt(81) = 9. Such numbers are called square numbers.
No. Real numbers are equivalence classes of cauchy sequences of rational numbers, which in turn are equivalence classes of pairs of integers (or whole numbers). Examples of real numbers that are not rational and therefore not integer are sqrt(2) and pi. Examples of real numbers that are rational but not integer are 1/2 and 13/17.
Integers include all whole numbers as well as their negative counterparts. Therefore, negative integers such as -1, -2, and -3 are examples of integers that are not whole numbers. Whole numbers, on the other hand, consist only of non-negative integers, including zero and positive integers.