Want this question answered?
Any positive number can be written as a quotient of two positive numbers or a quotient of two negative numbers. Any real number can be written as the quotient of two real numbers.
Yes but only if the denominator is 0 (so the quotient is not defined).
If one or both numbers are zero, then the answer is zero;if the two numbers have the same sign, then the answer is positive;if the two numbers have different signs, then the answer is negative.Incidentally, this is true of all real numbers, not just rationals.
An Irrational Number..
By definition, it is the set of all real numbers!
Any positive number can be written as a quotient of two positive numbers or a quotient of two negative numbers. Any real number can be written as the quotient of two real numbers.
Yes but only if the denominator is 0 (so the quotient is not defined).
No. Not if the second number is zero.
If one or both numbers are zero, then the answer is zero;if the two numbers have the same sign, then the answer is positive;if the two numbers have different signs, then the answer is negative.Incidentally, this is true of all real numbers, not just rationals.
It is a monomial.
The sign of the quotient will be positive. +A/+B = +C. -A/-B = +C. This assumes B is not zero.
Yes, a rational number is a real number. A rational number is a number that can be written as the quotient of two integers, a/b, where b does not equal 0. Integers are real numbers. The quotient of two real numbers is always a real number. The terms "rational" and "irrational" apply to the real numbers. There is no corresponding concept for any other types of numbers.
It stands for the quotient. The letter R stands for the set of Real numbers.
An Irrational Number..
No.
A real number is any number so yes it is always a real number * * * * * Except if the second number is 0, in which case the quotient is not defined.
By definition, it is the set of all real numbers!