By adding whatever you mean with "integers of a number".
Add the integers together, then divide it by the number of integers there are, (in this case 5)
No. A mean is another word for average. Can be negative, positive, or zero. As long as it adds 2 or more integers and divides it by the number of integers.
It is a real number that can be expressed as a ratio of two integers.
An integer is any positive or negative whole number
By adding whatever you mean with "integers of a number".
Add the integers together, then divide it by the number of integers there are, (in this case 5)
It is the position of the number zero.
No. A mean is another word for average. Can be negative, positive, or zero. As long as it adds 2 or more integers and divides it by the number of integers.
List the integers that will divide into the number evenly with no remainder.
It is a real number that can be expressed as a ratio of two integers.
Consecutive integers are integers that follow in sequence. Each number is 1 more than the previous numbers.
An integer is a number which does not have a decimal part at all.
An integer is any positive or negative whole number
7 If you mean integers, 7. If you mean decimals: An infinite number of decimals are between 6 and 8. 6.1, 6.2, 6.3 and so on. Then you can get decimals like 6.111112222222 I assume you mean integers so 7.
In relation to what? In a general sense they are the rules that govern their usage in mathematics and also define their properties. Huurrrmmppfff. I think.
These are rational number that are not integers. In their simplest form, they are of the form a/b where a and b are integers and b is not 0 nor 1.