you take the first number, then add it to the other number: 2+1=3 negative integers are different: -2+1= -1 Negative and negative: -2-1= -3
When adding a negative to a positive, the answer is positive if the positive is greater, and negative if the negative is greater. In other words, subtract the smaller from the larger and take the sign of the larger. Example: -7 + 9 = +2 Example: -9 + 7 = -2
When you add 1 and -2, you are essentially combining a positive integer with a negative integer. In this case, the negative integer (-2) is greater in magnitude than the positive integer (1). When you add them together, you subtract the smaller number from the larger number and give the result the sign of the larger number. So, 1 + (-2) equals -1.
No, if the decimal contains any number other than zero.
Any integer, other than 0, has a positive as well as a negative version. -0 is the same as +0, and so the two are treated as a single number.
Choose any integer. Let's call it "n". Then subtract 8 - n, to get the other integer. (For the two integers to have different signs, one of the integers must be greater than 8, the other will be negative.)
A negative integer is a number less than zero. In this case, -5 is greater than -9 because when comparing negative integers, the one with the higher absolute value is considered greater. In other words, -5 is closer to zero on the number line than -9, making it the larger negative integer.
you take the first number, then add it to the other number: 2+1=3 negative integers are different: -2+1= -1 Negative and negative: -2-1= -3
When adding a negative to a positive, the answer is positive if the positive is greater, and negative if the negative is greater. In other words, subtract the smaller from the larger and take the sign of the larger. Example: -7 + 9 = +2 Example: -9 + 7 = -2
The sum of zero and a negative integer can never be zero - it will always be negative and nonzero. Although zero is also an integer, it is neither negative nor positive and cannot be the other integer used.
The answer is -1. A negative integer is an integer to the left of zero on the number line. It is less than zero. So the greatest negative integer is -1.
When you add 1 and -2, you are essentially combining a positive integer with a negative integer. In this case, the negative integer (-2) is greater in magnitude than the positive integer (1). When you add them together, you subtract the smaller number from the larger number and give the result the sign of the larger number. So, 1 + (-2) equals -1.
10 is greater, but so is every other number greater than10!
That depends on which number is greater. ex: (9)+(-4)= +5 -- because the 9 is a larger number. Also, the use of a number line will really help. ...-5 _-4_ -3_ -2_ -1_ 0_ 1_ 2_ 3_ 4_ 5... just start on one of the numbers and then travel to the right (if the other number is positive) , or the left ( if the other number is negative) and you will land on your answer. keep in mind that 5+(-2)= 3 is the same as 5-2= 3 Hope this helps...and if you were asking "Is a positive number TIMES a negative number negative?", the answer is yes.
If you subtract one from the other and get a positive answer the one being subtracted from is greater than the other, if the answer is 0 then they are equal, if the answer is negative then one being subtracted from is less than than the other - so 3.29-3.4= ?
One (negative) is preceded by a - sign and the other (positive) is not. Negative integers have values less than zero, whereas positive integers have values greater than zero. If a positive and negative integer are made up of the same digits and in the same order (e.g., 2 and -2, or 896 and -896), then when added together they will equal zero. If, however, one is subtracted from the other, then they will equal twice the number from which the other is subtracted.
An integer is any number, positive or negative, that is written as a whole number. In other words, there is no fraction or decimals. Therefore, 14 is an integer.