Want this question answered?
a number line that has both a positive side and a negative side.
There is no such number. You can always go one more integer to the left.
gavin
It is a straight line from a vertex to the midpoint of the opposite side.
The right.
equidistant from zero on a standard number line
Because of the definition of addition and subtraction. When looking at a real number line: when you add you move to the left or up, when you add the opposite of a number you move in the opposite direction.
The closest integer to left of 11.7 on the number line is 11.
An integer less than 0 would be at the same distance from 0 as its positive equivalent, but would lie on the opposite side (left) of the 0.
An integer is a whole number so the answer is 4.
A positive integer is an integer to the right of zero on the number line. It is more then zero
The way the number line is usually drawn, the greatest integer is the one that is to the right of all the others.
No. For any integer, you can add one to get an even greater integer.
A positive integer is an integer to the right of zero on the number line. It is more then zero
a number line that has both a positive side and a negative side.
you put a dot on the number.
There is no such number. You can always go one more integer to the left.