Zero counts as neither positive nor negative. It is a neutral integer
A non-negative integer is a whole number above 0, and a negative integer is a whole number below 0.
Sometimes. For example: (-4) - (-3) = -1 (-4) - (-4) = 0 (-4) - (-5) = 1
There are no integers between 0 and negative one.
Yes the integer group includes negative numbers, positive numbers, and 0.
a negative integer is -1,-2,-3 and so on, but not -2.5 or 0 a positive integer is 1, 2, 3 and so on but not 7.2 or 0
ZERO 0
Zero counts as neither positive nor negative. It is a neutral integer
A non-negative integer is a whole number above 0, and a negative integer is a whole number below 0.
No. Integers are positive and negative whole numbers (…, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, …). As there are an infinite number of negative integers as they approach negative infinity (the greatest negative integer being -1), there can be no smallest (negative) integer.
Sometimes. For example: (-4) - (-3) = -1 (-4) - (-4) = 0 (-4) - (-5) = 1
There are no integers between 0 and negative one.
Yes the integer group includes negative numbers, positive numbers, and 0.
no, integer is 0 or positive / negative whole number
It is neither negative nor positive
Any integer, other than 0, has a positive as well as a negative version. -0 is the same as +0, and so the two are treated as a single number.
No, 0 is neither positive nor negative it is just 0