rational and prime numbers
Counting numbers
-5
It belongs to the set of negative rational numbers, negative real numbers, fractionall numbers, rational numbers, real numbers.
No. One, a counting number, doesn't belong to either of those sets.
9 belongs in the sets: -Natural number set, positive whole numbers -Integer number set, whole numbers -Rational number set, numbers that are not never ending -Real number set, basic numbers without i and that can be expressed in say amounts of apples -Complex number set, the set that contains both real and unreal numbers
Any set of numbers that contain them! For example, they belong to the set {10, 11} or {10, 11, sqrt(2), pi, -3/7}, or {10, 11, bananas, France, cold} or all whole numbers between 3 and 53, or counting numbers, or integers, or rational numbers, or real numbers, or complex numbers, etc.
The set of numbers which 3 does not belong is the set of even numbers.
The square root of 121 is 11, as (11 \times 11 = 121). Any numbers that are not equal to 11 do not belong to the square root of 121. This includes all numbers such as 10, 12, -11, and any other number that is not 11.
10 belongs to the set "natural numbers", but it can also belong to whole numbers, and rational numbers
Counting numbers
Irrational numbers.
The set of even numbers
It belongs to the set of prime numbers
Rational and Real numbers
mixed numbers
Integers
composite