No
Not sure what the "equal" on the end is for but zero is greater than negative one. -1<0 0>-1 -1<0<1
Between -1 and 0.
multiply both sides by "negative 1" (or any negative number excluding 0). This would make the side on -1 become a positive number. Any positive number would be greater than 0.
1
Yes, 0 is greater than -1. In the number line, 0 is positioned to the right of -1, indicating that it is greater. Therefore, the statement "0 is greater than or equal to -1" is true.
Not sure what the "equal" on the end is for but zero is greater than negative one. -1<0 0>-1 -1<0<1
If a < 0, then -a > 0. For example, if a = -1, then -a = -(-1) = 1 > 0.
No. Negative numbers are less than 0.
Between -1 and 0.
multiply both sides by "negative 1" (or any negative number excluding 0). This would make the side on -1 become a positive number. Any positive number would be greater than 0.
no.. -7<-1 i.e "negative 7 is less than negative 1" ------------- negative numbers like -1 are less than 0, making any number after -1 even lower than 0 making the lower up negatives like -1 greater than higher number negatives like -7
Zero is greater than negative one.
A positive decimal is GREATER THAN a Negative number. Think of the number line. Less than < -2, -1.5, - 1, -0.5 , 0 , +0.5, + 1, + 1.5, +2, > Greater than.
Any NEGATIVE number is SMALLER then 0, or less in value(-1,-2,-3...) BUT COUNTING numbers are GREATER than 0 (1,2,3...)
There are infinitely many such numbers. One such is -0.99876123
It is greater.
I'm guessing you mean, "What is 10 to the 0th power?"The answer, of course, is the same for 10, as it is for anything else, 1, because numbers greater than 1 to a negative power are less than 1, but greater than 0, and numbers greater than 1 to powers between 0 and 1 are between 1 and that number.