Yes.Yes. The definition of integer is basically 'a whole number.'
Every positive integer including 0 is a whole number.
A whole number is the same thing as an integer. 5.4 is a decimal number, so it is not a whole number or an integer.
As stated, that is false. Every number is not a factor of 1. 1 is a factor of every nonzero whole number.
Yes - an integer is a whole number - the Latin word "integer" translates into English as "untouched", or, loosely, "whole".
Yes, it is true that every whole number is an integer.
No, but every whole is a integer. integers are - and +. whole number are only +.
Yes.Yes. The definition of integer is basically 'a whole number.'
For any integer, there is a whole number that is bigger, and for any whole number, there is a integer that is bigger.
There is no such number: every whole number is an integer.
Every whole number IS an integer so the question is misguided.
That is true.
Yes, but not every integer is a whole number. (Negative integers are not whole numbers.)
There is no such number since every integer is a whole number.
Every whole number or integer has 1 as a factor.
All whole numbers are rational.
Yes, every whole number is an integer. Whole Numbers: 0, 1, 2, 3, ... Integers: ..., -3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3, ... Every whole number is in the set of integers. However an integer is not necessarily a whole number, as whole numbers do not include negative numbers.