One is a natural number. Sometimes zero is included, sometimes it isn't. Negative one is not a natural number. Your answer is one or two , depending on which definition you use and whether you meant to be inclusive or exclusive.
just ten times... in the numbers 50 to 59 inclusive.
only one whole number is not a natural number and it is 0
Any number between 64 & 81 inclusive.
Since there is an infinite number of real numbers and an infinite number of natural numbers, there is not more of one kind than of another.
There are 39 natural numbers between 1,000 and 1,500, inclusive, that are divisible by 13.
natural numbers are positive not including 0, so therefore, 10. 1 thru 10
One is a natural number. Sometimes zero is included, sometimes it isn't. Negative one is not a natural number. Your answer is one or two , depending on which definition you use and whether you meant to be inclusive or exclusive.
Between -10 and 10 there are 9 natural numbers if exclusive of the -10 and 10, or 10 if inclusive. The natural numbers are the positive integers starting with 1, ie {1, 2, 3, ...}.
There are 13 possible remainders: the numbers from 0 to 12 (inclusive).
just ten times... in the numbers 50 to 59 inclusive.
No. There are infinitely many real numbers for every natural number.
only one whole number is not a natural number and it is 0
No. There are infinitely many real numbers for every natural number.
No, there are infinitely many: all the natural numbers.
There are 49 3-digit numbers - from 108 to 990 inclusive.
Any number between 64 & 81 inclusive.