probobly because pi equals 3.14 and you can make 3.14 negative so yes you can have negative pi
In the domain [0, 2*pi],sin is negative for pi < x < 2*picos is negative pi/2 < x < 3*pi/2 andtan is negative for pi/2 < x < pi and 3*pi/2 < x < pi.Also, the same applies for all intervals obtained by adding any integer multiple of 2*pi to the bounds.
The question cannot be answered because it is based on a false premise: negative pi is NOT a negative rational number.
All negative numbers are less than pi.
the square root of pi
probobly because pi equals 3.14 and you can make 3.14 negative so yes you can have negative pi
Negative pi is a monomial, or a polynomial with one term. Negative pi, as well as positive pi, are not often used as polynomials, but it is still perfectly reasonable to do so.
In the domain [0, 2*pi],sin is negative for pi < x < 2*picos is negative pi/2 < x < 3*pi/2 andtan is negative for pi/2 < x < pi and 3*pi/2 < x < pi.Also, the same applies for all intervals obtained by adding any integer multiple of 2*pi to the bounds.
No Pi is always the same.
(-1/pi)-1 = -pi
The question cannot be answered because it is based on a false premise: negative pi is NOT a negative rational number.
No. Pi is a set number, if it were negative (-3.14159...) it would not represent the ratio of radius to circumference.
All negative numbers are less than pi.
the square root of pi
Yes.
Negative 0.5 is.
sin pi/2 =1 sin 3 pi/2 is negative 1 ( it is in 3rd quadrant where sin is negative