Yes, a natural number is always a whole number.for ex- 1 is a natural no. And is a whole no. Too.in fact every natural no. Is a whole no.
Every whole number is rational and an integer. But the "natural" numbers are definedas the counting numbers, so the negative whole numbers wouldn't qualify.No and yes: it is not a natural number but it is a rational number.
Every natural number satisfies the requirements.
No. Every rational number is not a whole number but every whole number is a rational number. Rational numbers include integers, natural or counting numbers, repeating and terminating decimals and fractions, and whole numbers.
0 is whole no but not a natural no.
Yes, every natural number is a whole number.
yes
Yes, a natural number is always a whole number.for ex- 1 is a natural no. And is a whole no. Too.in fact every natural no. Is a whole no.
Every whole number is rational and an integer. But the "natural" numbers are definedas the counting numbers, so the negative whole numbers wouldn't qualify.No and yes: it is not a natural number but it is a rational number.
No. Negative whole numbers are not natural numbers.
Every natural number satisfies the requirements.
Yes. Every whole number and every whole negative number and zero are all integers.
No. Every rational number is not a whole number but every whole number is a rational number. Rational numbers include integers, natural or counting numbers, repeating and terminating decimals and fractions, and whole numbers.
Yes. Every negative integer.
Yes, the set of whole number is all of the natural numbers, plus zero.
Whole numbers are usually defined as the number 0,1,2,3,4,5,6.... where "...." means it goes on forever. These are the natural numbers with the number 0 added to them. So the natural numbers are 1,2,3,4,5,6...The integers are all the whole number and all the negatives of the natural numbers....-4,-3,-2,-1,0,1,2,3,4...So every whole number is an integer.Every natural number is an integer.Every integer is NOT a whole number. ( look at -2)Every integer is NOT a natural number. ( look at -3)The set of integers contains the set of natural numbers and contains the set of whole numbers.The set of whole numbers contains the set of natural numbers.
No. The natural numbers are the counting numbers {1, 2, 3, ....} and every one of them is a whole number. 4/11 is a fraction (rational number) which is not [also a whole number], thus it cannot be a natural number.