technically it is 0.5 because then thay said less than 1 but greater than 0 so if u do 0.5 it is inbetween
Negative a is greater than, equal to or less than 0 depending on whether a, itself, is less than, equal to or greater than 0.
No, -49 is not greater than 0. It is a negative number, which means it is less than zero. In the number line, any negative number is always positioned to the left of zero, indicating that it is smaller.
0, for example.
It is less than 0. That is what the minus sign, "-", means!
Integers greater than -3 and less than 2 are: -2 -1 0 1
point on the number line is greater than 0 but less than 2 = 1
A negative number is less than a positive number. Think about it this way: a negative number is less than 0. A positive number is greater than 0. Therefore, a negative number must be less than a positive number.
Greater than zero because any negative number times a negative number equals a positive number.
A negative number is less than zero.
Negative a is greater than, equal to or less than 0 depending on whether a, itself, is less than, equal to or greater than 0.
Any number with a 0. in front of it is LESS than zero. Is 1 less than 0? No it is greater.
When the number is between 0 and 1, or less than -1
No, -2.5 is not greater than 0. In fact, -2.5 is a negative number, which means it is less than 0. Therefore, it is positioned to the left of 0 on the number line.
-0.5
If the number is greater than or equal to 0 you do nothing. If the number is less than 0 then you take the negative of the number.
4 and or 6
0 and 0.5