The greater than sign is ">" and the less than sign is "<"
No, ten is equal to ten. If you see a less than/equal to sign, the statement is true.A less than/equal to sign has a less than sign on top of an equal sign.
Accenture * * * * * No, The Accenture logo does not have a "less than" sign.
< means less than > means greater than
the meaning of less than is - and more than is Justin bieber
Press 2ND TEST (above MATH). The less than sign should be the fifth option.
If the two sides of the equation are unequal, you need the greater than or the less than sign instead of the equal sign. If the left side is less, use the less than sign. Otherwise, use the greater than sign.
Where instead of an equal sign, it might be greater than or less than signs.
I've seen less than equal to signs typed on a computer shown as <= but make sure the reader knows you are doing math. If you are writing it with pencil and paper, then use <_ (with the underscore underneath the less than sign)
Less than sign is < Greater than sign is >
The greater than sign is ">" and the less than sign is "<"
No, ten is equal to ten. If you see a less than/equal to sign, the statement is true.A less than/equal to sign has a less than sign on top of an equal sign.
the less than sign is > the greater than sign is <
Less than.
An inequality must have a greater than sign (>) OR a less than sign (<) OR a greater than or equal to sign (≥) OR a less than or equal to sign (≤).
It is the "less than" symbol.In math, < stands for less than and > stands for greater than.For example, 25 < 75 would be read "25 is less than 75." (the point is toward the smaller number)
The less than sign I believe that you are talking about is the minus/subtraction sign? The addition sign, +, is the opposite of the subtraction sign :)