It is considered neutral as it has no value.
basically zero is neutral, because its nor positive nor negative. its also in between positive and negative integers.
Zero counts as neither positive nor negative. It is a neutral integer
Zero is the middle. The neutral. There has to be something to separate the positive and the negative.
Zero is not negative. It is not positive either.Zero is not negative. It is not positive either.Zero is not negative. It is not positive either.Zero is not negative. It is not positive either.
An object that has equal numbers of positive and negative charges is called electrically neutral. This means that the overall charge of the object is zero, as the positive and negative charges cancel each other out. Examples include a neutral atom or a neutral molecule.
basically zero is neutral, because its nor positive nor negative. its also in between positive and negative integers.
no because zero isn't positive or negative it is neutral
No. Zero is neither positive nor negative. You might think of it as being neutral.
Zero counts as neither positive nor negative. It is a neutral integer
0 is a neutral number. zero is nor positive or negative because NEGITIVE being a number smaller than zero POSITIVE being a number bigger than zero so since zero isn't being smaller or bigger zero isn't positive or negative
9 and 17 are. Zero is neutral, neither positive nor negative.
Zero is neither negative nor positive. By definition, a positive number is greater than zero. Similarly, a negative number is less than zero. Zero itself does not fit into either of those categories, and is thus neither negative nor positive; it is neutral. "Negative zero" then, is equal to -1 × 0, which equals 0.
Zero is the middle. The neutral. There has to be something to separate the positive and the negative.
Zero is not negative. It is not positive either.Zero is not negative. It is not positive either.Zero is not negative. It is not positive either.Zero is not negative. It is not positive either.
As equal amount of positive and negative charges are there then the net charge on the object is the algebraical sum of them and hence it becomes zero. So chargeless.
An object that has equal numbers of positive and negative charges is called electrically neutral. This means that the overall charge of the object is zero, as the positive and negative charges cancel each other out. Examples include a neutral atom or a neutral molecule.
There is no negative of zero, nor is there a positive. Zero is no value, hence it has no positive or negative value.