no
No because the commutative property only works for addition and multiplication
when you add two positive integers the answer is always positive when you add two negative integers the answer is positive when you add one negative and on positive integer, the answer is negative subtracting two negative numbers gets a negative answer subtracting two positive numbers- the answer depends subtracting a negative and positive number- the answer depends, the positive number would have to be bigger than the negative to achieve a negative number, and if the positive number is less, than the answer is still negative
The answer when subtracting one number from another is called a difference. When subtracting one fraction from another, it is still called a difference.
Neither. It is in between positive and negative but it is still an integer.
Yes, when an integer is subtracted from another integer, the result is still an integer. This is due to the closure property of integers, which states that the set of integers is closed under subtraction. Therefore, any operation involving two integers, such as subtraction, will yield another integer.
no.
No because the commutative property only works for addition and multiplication
when you add two positive integers the answer is always positive when you add two negative integers the answer is positive when you add one negative and on positive integer, the answer is negative subtracting two negative numbers gets a negative answer subtracting two positive numbers- the answer depends subtracting a negative and positive number- the answer depends, the positive number would have to be bigger than the negative to achieve a negative number, and if the positive number is less, than the answer is still negative
When you add two negative integers, the answer is still negative.
You still own the house if you have a reverse mortgage, yes.
The answer when subtracting one number from another is called a difference. When subtracting one fraction from another, it is still called a difference.
A powerful tradition of field-songs, which are still sung today.
The associative property states, no matter how you order three or more integers being added, they will always equal the same solution. For example, A + (B + C) = (A +B) + C * * * * * The equation is correct but the description is not. When you say "no matter how you order three or more integers" you are implying that A + B + C = A + C + B and that need not be true. Associativity refers to the order in which the summation is carried out. That does not matter.
Neither. It is in between positive and negative but it is still an integer.
Yes, when an integer is subtracted from another integer, the result is still an integer. This is due to the closure property of integers, which states that the set of integers is closed under subtraction. Therefore, any operation involving two integers, such as subtraction, will yield another integer.
You cannot. There are uses for them which are still undiscovered.
Yes - negative integers are still whole numbers.