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There is none; numbers don't stop.
No, numbers go on and on forever.
Yes, that is true.
Yes, there are infinitely many natural numbers greater than 9. Natural numbers start from 1 and continue indefinitely, so numbers like 10, 11, 12, and so on, all qualify as natural numbers greater than 9. The set of natural numbers is unbounded, meaning there is no largest natural number.
The set of natural numbers is a subset of the set of whole numbers. The set of whole numbers is a subset of the set of integers. So the set of integers is the largest of these three sets.
There is none; numbers don't stop.
No, numbers go on and on forever.
Yes, that is true.
Yes, there are infinitely many natural numbers greater than 9. Natural numbers start from 1 and continue indefinitely, so numbers like 10, 11, 12, and so on, all qualify as natural numbers greater than 9. The set of natural numbers is unbounded, meaning there is no largest natural number.
The set of natural numbers is a subset of the set of whole numbers. The set of whole numbers is a subset of the set of integers. So the set of integers is the largest of these three sets.
No, they go on forever - so there is no largest natural number, even or odd.
The LCM for any pair of natural numbers can be as big as their product.
The set of natural numbers is infinite. It includes all positive integers starting from 1 and continues indefinitely (1, 2, 3, 4, ...). There is no largest natural number, as you can always add one more to any given natural number, demonstrating that the set does not have an upper limit. Thus, the natural numbers are unbounded and infinite.
Yes, all natural numbers are real numbers. Natural numbers are a subset of real numbers, so not all real numbers are natural numbers.
It is the set of natural numbers.
All natural numbers are rational numbers. No irrational numbers are natural numbers.
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