A positive number is to the right of the zero on the number line. (I believe that is what you meant to ask).
Yes!.. Think of a number line, zero in the middle, negative to the left, positive to the right. If you start on the right (positive) and go a bit more right (more positive)... you'll still be on the right (positive)
A number line can have both positive and negative numbers. You can put the number line in any position, but often it is represented so that numbers to the right of zero are positive, and numbers to the left of zero, negative.
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.
On a number line, zero is positioned at the center, with positive numbers to the right and negative numbers to the left. The concept of an opposite number means that when you add a number and its opposite, the result is zero. Since zero is neither positive nor negative, its opposite is itself; thus, adding zero to zero results in zero. This visually illustrates that zero is its own opposite on the number line.
in your question it is on the right but on a number line it is right from zero.
Numbers to the right of zero on a number line are positive numbers; to the left are the negative numbers.
Positive numbers go to the right of zero, negative numbers go to the left of zero.
Yes!.. Think of a number line, zero in the middle, negative to the left, positive to the right. If you start on the right (positive) and go a bit more right (more positive)... you'll still be on the right (positive)
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.
A number line can have both positive and negative numbers. You can put the number line in any position, but often it is represented so that numbers to the right of zero are positive, and numbers to the left of zero, negative.
Yes. Write the number line horizontally with the negative numbers to the left, zero in the middle and positive numbers to the right, then the further right a number is, the greater it is; so with two numbers the number further right on the line is the greater of the two: Positive five is to the right of negative five, therefore it is greater than negative five, ie +5 > -5
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.
Yes, positive 10 is greater than negative 4. In the number line, positive numbers are always to the right of zero, while negative numbers are to the left. Since 10 is to the right of zero and -4 is to the left, 10 is indeed greater than -4.
On a number line, zero is positioned at the center, with positive numbers to the right and negative numbers to the left. The concept of an opposite number means that when you add a number and its opposite, the result is zero. Since zero is neither positive nor negative, its opposite is itself; thus, adding zero to zero results in zero. This visually illustrates that zero is its own opposite on the number line.
A positive integer is an integer to the right of zero on the number line. It is more then zero
no negative numbers are always smaller than positive numbers..... you can draw out a numberline and see any number to the left of the number zero is negative and to the right is positive
in your question it is on the right but on a number line it is right from zero.