-5
Two (2) minus negative three (-3) is five (5). When you subtract a negative number it is the same as adding a positive number of the same absolute value.
Absolute value of -2+(-5) is 7.
The absolute value of any negative number is equal to the corresponding positive value. In this instance, abs (-2) = 2.
No because absolute value of negative 8 equals to positive 8
It is: 10-2 = 8
Two (2) minus negative three (-3) is five (5). When you subtract a negative number it is the same as adding a positive number of the same absolute value.
Absolute value of -2+(-5) is 7.
It is either 2|x| - 3 or 2|x-3| depending on if the minus three is part of the absolute value.
The absolute value of any negative number is equal to the corresponding positive value. In this instance, abs (-2) = 2.
No because absolute value of negative 8 equals to positive 8
It is: 10-2 = 8
90
2 - 7 = -5. The absolute value of -5 is 5
No, the absolute value of a number cannot equal a negative number.
The absolute value of a number is the positive (or non-negative) value of the number. The absolute value of 0 or a positive number is the number itself. The absolute value of a negative number is its positive equivalent.
2
the absolute value is always positive, by definition -2 x -2 x -2 = -8 absolute value of -8 is +8 Ans: + 8