Two (assuming you are talking about real numbers). In general, for any given positive number, there will be two real numbers whose absolute value is that given number.
In the case of complex numbers, the answer is "infinitely many" - all the numbers on a circle centered on the origin, with that radius, have that absolute value.
It is -5.75
The absolute value of - 4 5/6 is 4 5/6.
1.25 is equal to five fourths.
It's two in five tenths.
10
5/4
It is -5.75
47 because absolute value measures how many digits you are away from zero, so for example the absolute value of five is five
The absolute value of - 4 5/6 is 4 5/6.
1.25 is equal to five fourths.
Five halves divided by five fourths = 2
They appear to be five miscellaneous numbers.
It's two in five tenths.
3
10
6 + 5n < |n - 1| I have used the absolute value for "difference". This is, unfortunately, an ambiguous term. The absolute value is the difference between the numbers - irrespective of the sign.
five The absolute value is the distance from zero so the answer is positive 5