a negative integer or a fraction (as in 1/integer) or a negative fraction (as in -1/integer).
Yes, -1 is the integer with the highest value on the negative side.
Sometimes. For example: (-4) - (-3) = -1 (-4) - (-4) = 0 (-4) - (-5) = 1
Negative 0.6 rounded to the nearest integer is -1.
Always positive. For example, -3 divided by -1 = +3, because there are THREE lots of -1 in -3.
a negative integer or a fraction (as in 1/integer) or a negative fraction (as in -1/integer).
The smallest positive integer is 1. 1 is the multiplicative identity; ie anything times 1 is itself. The greatest negative integer is the most positive negative integer which is -1. Therefore the product of the greatest negative integer and the smallest positive integer is the greatest negative integer which is -1.
The smallest positive integer is 1. The largest negative integer is -1. 1 > -1
Yes, -1 is the integer with the highest value on the negative side.
Largest negative integer-1 true or false
The answer is -1. A negative integer is an integer to the left of zero on the number line. It is less than zero. So the greatest negative integer is -1.
The least non negative integer would be 1.
Sometimes. For example: (-4) - (-3) = -1 (-4) - (-4) = 0 (-4) - (-5) = 1
Negative 0.6 rounded to the nearest integer is -1.
Always positive. For example, -3 divided by -1 = +3, because there are THREE lots of -1 in -3.
No, not every negative number is an integer. For example, -11/2 is not an integer. However, -1, -2, -3, and so on, are negative integers. Perhaps that is what you meant to ask. The negative of every positive integer is a negative integer.
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.