The square root of 50 is an irrational number because it can't be expressed as a fraction.
No. However, the square root of any positive integer that is NOT a perfect square, IS irrational.
Since 57 is not a perfect square, its square root is IRRATIONAL.
Since 68 is not a perfect square, its square root is irrational.
Irrational. The square root of a positive integer is either an integer (that is, if the integer is a perfect square), or an irrational number.
No. The square root of most numbers is irrational - only if the number of which you take the root happen to be perfect squares, do you get a rational root. In this case, to take the square root of 3/4, 3 is not a perfect square, so the root is not rational. Or you can take .75 to be 75/100; once again, 75 is not a perfect square, so the root is irrational.
It is rational. The root of a perfect square, such as 4, is rational; the root of any positive integer that is not a perfect square is an irrational number.
The square root of (any number that isn't a perfect square) is irrational.
The square root of (any number that isn't a perfect square) is irrational.
The square root of (any number that isn't a perfect square) is irrational.
The square root of (any number that isn't a perfect square) is irrational.
No. However, the square root of any positive integer that is NOT a perfect square, IS irrational.
Since 68 is not a perfect square, its square root is irrational.
Since 57 is not a perfect square, its square root is IRRATIONAL.
The square root of 13 is irrational. All square roots of whole numbers are irrational unless the number is a perfect square.
Irrational. The square root of a positive integer is either an integer (that is, if the integer is a perfect square), or an irrational number.
The square root of (any number that isn't a perfect square) is irrational.
No. If 'x' is a perfect square, then its square root is also rational.