Well since two positives equal a negative, the problem would really seem to be -22+11 which then equals -11
Minus one (also known as negative one) is larger than minus eleven (also known as negative eleven).
-3 minus -11 is 8.
positive four
-20
Eleven of anything minus seven of the same thing leaves four of them.
Minus one (also known as negative one) is larger than minus eleven (also known as negative eleven).
-3 minus -11 is 8.
-6
Five minus eleven is negative six, or 5-11=-6.
positive four
It is: -10-1 = -11
-20
9 - -2 = 11
To write the expression "negative ten times the quantity two minus eleven" in numbers, you would first simplify the expression within the parentheses. Two minus eleven equals negative nine. Then, you multiply negative ten by negative nine to get positive ninety. Therefore, the expression "negative ten times the quantity two minus eleven" can be written as -10 * (2 - 11) = 90.
positive 5 minus positive 11 = negative 6
-4/7 − -11/8 = 45/56
That is impossible, it doesn't work. the answer in the textbook or whatever must be wrong. It is 5