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
-13 is less than 1 similarly -13 < 1 -13 is a Negative number meaning it is below 0 (To the left) on the number line.
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.
Any NEGATIVE number is SMALLER then 0, or less in value(-1,-2,-3...) BUT COUNTING numbers are GREATER than 0 (1,2,3...)
The number that is greater than -1 but less than 0 is -0.5. This number falls between -1 and 0 on the number line, closer to 0 than to -1. It is a negative number but is greater than -1 in value.
Is negative 1.16 greater than positive 1?
No, -1 is greater than -4
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.