It is exactly six thousand = 6000 no less and no more
1000 more:7735 1000 less:5735
They are: > means greater than and < means less than
Yes, but only when the inequality is not a strict inequality: thatis to say it is a "less than or equal to" or "more than or equal to" inequality. In such cases, the solution to the "or equal to" aspect will satisfy the corresponding inequality.
A more formal name is the strict inequality sign.
It is exactly six thousand = 6000 no less and no more
1000 more:7735 1000 less:5735
They are: > means greater than and < means less than
Yes, but only when the inequality is not a strict inequality: thatis to say it is a "less than or equal to" or "more than or equal to" inequality. In such cases, the solution to the "or equal to" aspect will satisfy the corresponding inequality.
6000
A more formal name is the strict inequality sign.
No, inequalities have more than, less then, at least, or no more than signs. Equations just have equal signs. An inequality answer can't be written as just a number it has to have a sign with it.
It is an inequality that defines all numbers (in the domain) such that they are not 3 or more.
If a word problem states "no more than", the corresponding inequality sign is less than or equal to (≤). For example, if x is no more than than 4, then: x ≤ 4.
An appropriate inequality would be to look at what at most means - at most means that it could be less and it could be equal to, but not more. That is, S <= 15
It is correct to say "...serves more than 6000..."
If the signnn is less than then it is below the line , if it is more than than it is above the line, that is the shaded region, If the signnn is less than then it is below the line , if it is more than than it is above the line, that is the shaded region,