There are more irrational numbers than rational numbers. The rationals are countably infinite; the irrationals are uncountably infinite. Uncountably infinite means that the set of irrational numbers has a cardinality known as the "cardinality of the continuum," which is strictly greater than the cardinality of the set of natural numbers which is countably infinite. The set of rational numbers has the same cardinality as the set of natural numbers, so there are more irrationals than rationals.
It is the set of natural numbers.
Finite.
Real numbers are all numbers. So the answer would be -4 and every number after that in the negative direction. So any number that is less than -4. So, -5, -6, and so on.
natural numbers
The set of natural numbers less than four is {1, 2, 3}.
an empty set
set of all even natural numbers less than 10 = {2, 4, 6, 8}
The set of all odd natural numbers less than 10 is [1,3,5,7,9].
The set of natural numbers less than 3 includes the numbers 1 and 2. Natural numbers are positive integers starting from 1, so any number less than 3 within this set would be 1 or 2. This set does not include the number 3 itself since natural numbers start from 1 and do not include 0 or negative numbers.
The empty set is a finite set.
The natural numbers are the counting numbers Thus the set m of those counting numbers less than 5 is: m = {1, 2, 3, 4}
set of all even natural numbers less than 9 Answer = {1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8}
infinte
1,3,5,7,9
2, 4
1, 3, 5