A counting number is the numbers you lear as a little kid, counting numbers are one and up. Integers include the counting numbers, 0, and the opposite (negative) of counting numbers. So yes, a counting number or the opposite of a counting number is an integer.
All three.
Natural numbers are the counting numbers: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, etc... Integers are positive and negative counting numbers, and zero. So, an integer that is not a counting number could be 0 or any negative integer.
It is a number. A counting number, an integer, a rational number, a real number, etc.It is a number. A counting number, an integer, a rational number, a real number, etc.It is a number. A counting number, an integer, a rational number, a real number, etc.It is a number. A counting number, an integer, a rational number, a real number, etc.
It is just an integer/real/counting number.
An integer is a positive number or its opposite. Meaning 8.9 is not an integer but 8.0 is, an integer has to be a whole number, positive or negative! You're welcome... :) <3 'peace an blessins, peace an blessins'! GLOZELL
A counting number is the numbers you lear as a little kid, counting numbers are one and up. Integers include the counting numbers, 0, and the opposite (negative) of counting numbers. So yes, a counting number or the opposite of a counting number is an integer.
Yes, and including zero.
Here are a few: An integer is a counting number, or a whole number. If you have a negative counting number, zero, or a positive counting number, you have an integer, and any integer will be a member of one of those three sets of numbers. Zero is the only integer that is neither positive or negative. Each integer (except zero) has a compliment with an opposite sign.
YES. Every counting number is an integer.
Every counting number IS an integer.
An integer is not an equation, but rather a counting number.
Yes
A counting number.
A counting number.
The product is an integer that may or may not be a counting number.All integers are whole numbers.The counting numbers are {1, 2, 3, ...}The integers are the counting numbers along with 0 and the negative counting numbers, ie {..., -3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3, ...}The product of two of these is an integer that will be:a negative counting number {..., -3, -2, -1} - the first integer is a counting number, the second is a negative counting numberzero {0} - either, or both, number is zeroa counting number {1, 2, 3, ...} both integers are negative counting numbers.
A non-integer.
Integers are whole numbers such as: ..., -3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3, ... Counting numbers are whole numbers such as: 1, 2, 3, 4, ... So the product can be a whole positive number or zero. Example: (-2)(-3)= 6 (-2)(0) = 0