The additive inverse of an integer ( x ) is the integer that, when added to ( x ), results in zero. This integer is (-x). For example, the additive inverse of 5 is -5, and the additive inverse of -3 is 3.
Zero
Yes.
Zero
The additive inverse is the sum of two numbers that will equal zero. The additive inverse of -18 is 18.
The additive inverse of 41 is -41. An additive inverse is the number that will make the sum equal zero.
Zero
The additive inverse for a number is its negative value. The sum of an integer and its additive inverse is zero. For the example (5), the additive inverse would be (-5).
The additive inverse states that a number added to its opposite will equal zero. A + (-A) = 0. The "opposite" number here is the "negative" of the number. For any number n, the additive inverse is (-1)n. So therefore yes.
Additive Inverse
Yes.
Zero
The additive inverse is the sum of two numbers that will equal zero. The additive inverse of -18 is 18.
The additive inverse of 41 is -41. An additive inverse is the number that will make the sum equal zero.
Change its sign.
When we add an integer to its additive inverse, the result is always zero. The additive inverse of an integer ( n ) is ( -n ), so ( n + (-n) = 0 ). This property holds true for all integers, demonstrating the fundamental concept of additive identity in mathematics.
It is zero, by definition of additive inverse!
391 A number and its additive inverse must equal zero.