True
False
T
The absolute value (magnitude) of -17 is greater than the absolute value (magnitude) of -5. -5 is considered to be greater (more positive) than -17.
It depends. No matter what, you subtract the two quantities. If the absolute value of the positive integer is greater than the absolute value of the negative integer, your answer is positive. If the absolute value of the negative integer is greater than the absolute value of the positive integer, your answer is negative.For example:-32+11 is -21, because the absolute value of -32 is greater than the absolute value of 11, and 32 is negative.-11+32 is 21, because the absolute value of 32 is greater than the absolute value of 11, and 32 is positive.If this is all confusing, I like to remember a song my seventh grade math teacher taught the class to the tune of "row row row your boat:"same sign add and keepdifferent sign subtractkeep the sign of the larger numberthen you'll be exact!"(the word "sign" refers to negative or positive)
No. All positive numbers are greater than zero and all negative numbers are less than zero. Therefore, all positive numbers are greater than all negative numbers. That said, there is a such thing as absolute value, which is how far a number is from zero. For example the absolute value of -10 is 10. The absolute value of a negative number can be greater than that of a positive number.
The absolute value of 3 is +3. No negative number can have a value greater than +3.
No.A positive integer is always larger than a negative integer. In the case of two negative integers, the integer with the larger absolute value is actually smaller.
No. The absolute value of negative nine is greater than the absolute value of 3.
The absolute value is only ever positive. * * * * * Or 0.
If the negative has a greater absolute value, the sum will be negative. If the positive has a greater absolute value, the sum will be positive.
False
The absolute value will always be positive because if you think about it, the absolute value.
true (that's the whole point of absolute value)
Any negative number has an absolute value that is greater than itself.
Whichever has the greater absolute value.
T
No. You have it backwards . . . . . the absolute value of a negative number is always a positive number.