yes
One (negative) is preceded by a - sign and the other (positive) is not. Negative integers have values less than zero, whereas positive integers have values greater than zero. If a positive and negative integer are made up of the same digits and in the same order (e.g., 2 and -2, or 896 and -896), then when added together they will equal zero. If, however, one is subtracted from the other, then they will equal twice the number from which the other is subtracted.
no it doesnt. two negative numbers equal a negative number. two postivie numbers equal a positive number. one negative and one positive number equal a negative number.
One divided by zero is an undefined operation, which leads to contradictions and nonsense.For this reason, division by zero is forbidden in arithmetic.
Quotient positive: Both integers have the same sign: both positive or both negative. Quotient zero: The first integer is 0. Quotient negative: The integers have opposite signs: one positive and one negative.
yes
42,100,876,9765,098.6 xx :) All real numbers, except zero and one.
Anything multiplied by zero is equal to zero.
yes
0 ÷ -1 = 0
Any non-zero number divided by itself is equal to one.
Zero
Not sure what the "equal" on the end is for but zero is greater than negative one. -1<0 0>-1 -1<0<1
1.3333
-3/4 divided by -1/4 = 3
One-third is one divided by three. One-third lies between 0 and 1 on the number-line Similarly.... Negative one-third is negative one divided by three. It lies between -1 and 0 on the number-line. So no, -1 and -1/3 are not equal.
When I type any number divided by zero into my calculator, it flashes, "ERROR, ERROR," but I say it's possible. "It's not possible to divide by zero," my math teacher says, but who cares about her? Here's my data after graphing it out: If any positive number is divided by zero, it's infinity, if it's negative, it's negative infinity, and zero divided by zero is one. NO NO, you cannot divide by zero, really. See my discussion post.