Any negative integer, for example -3, is one of infinitely many such numbers.
A whole number is one without a decimal or fraction, and a natural number is any positive integer, so this is both a whole number and an integer.
One over six is an integer divided by an integer.That is the definition of a rational number.
No, to be an integer it would have to be a whole number.
No. An integer is a WHOLE number. A number with a decimal place or a fraction is not an integer :)
1/3 is not an integer, and there is no such thing as an interger. An integer is a whole number.
It is a whole number.
A whole number is one without a decimal or fraction, and a natural number is any positive integer, so this is both a whole number and an integer.
One over six is an integer divided by an integer.That is the definition of a rational number.
-1 is all of an integer, a whole number, and a rational number.
No, to be an integer it would have to be a whole number.
No, -8.5 is not an integer. An integer is a number without any fractions.
No. An integer is a WHOLE number. A number with a decimal place or a fraction is not an integer :)
1/3 is not an integer, and there is no such thing as an interger. An integer is a whole number.
Integers are whole numbers such as: ..., -3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3, ... Counting numbers are whole numbers such as: 1, 2, 3, 4, ... So the product can be a whole positive number or zero. Example: (-2)(-3)= 6 (-2)(0) = 0
No because an integer is a whole number without fractions or decimals
It is a whole number and an integer but, since it is only one number, it cannot be "a integers"!
We looked on-line for definitions of "integer", and every one we found defined "integer" as meaning "whole number". So, yes.