It will appear to the right of B.
Smaller numbers always go to the left of larger number on the number line.
Integers on the number line are the whole numbers.
No. However, it does have to have a beginning number. beside the beginning number, on the actual line, you would put an arrow on the end of it, because numbers are infinite in both directions.
If the number line has negative numbers to the left of zero and positive numbers to the right then the further you go to the right, the greater the numbers become.
That would be a number line.
Yes. In fact, a number line would be full of an uncountably many infinite number of discontinuities (holes) without them and hence would not be a line, so in fact irrational numbers MUST be placed on the number line in order for it to exist.
No. All numbers that appear on any given number line are real numbers. To be an integer, a number must not have any fractions or decimals. An integer could be positive or negative, or 0.
That would be the real numbers.
A number line has negative numbers to the left of zero, and -3.5 is a distance of 3.5 to the left.
It will appear to the right of B.
Smaller numbers always go to the left of larger number on the number line.
Numbers to the right of zero on a number line are positive numbers; to the left are the negative numbers.
When you are starting to learn about numbers, their addition and subtraction.
Usually 20 units to the left of the origin (or zero point).
To the left of 0, between -21 on its left and -19 on its right.
On a number line, the positive numbers extend to the right of zero, and the negative numbers extend to the left of zero. So -3.4 is 3.4 to the left of zero.