Zero
-17/10 = -1.7
rational number.
No. The additive inverse of zero or a negative rational number is not negative.
Yes, negative numbers can most certainly be rational. A rational number is simply a number which can be expressed as a fraction. An example of a negative rational number is: -1/2
A negative number can indeed be rational. A rational number is defined as any number that can be expressed as the quotient of two integers, where the denominator is not zero. For example, -3/4 and -2 are both negative rational numbers. Thus, negative numbers can be rational as long as they fit this definition.
When the numbers are negative
Zero is the only scuh number.
It is a negative number. It is also a rational number; also, it's a real number.
It is the positive value of that rational number.
-17/10 = -1.7
No, -5 is a negative, rational number.
Any rational positive number is still rational when you make the same number negative.
It is the smallest non-negative rational number. Negative numbers are rational and are smaller.
You use a negative rational number when an answer is below zero.
The negative of a rational number is also rational.
If its positive version is rational then it is rational and if not, it is not.
-16.987 is a rational number