It isn't always negative.
... for example:
-5 + 12 = 7 (a positive number)
-5 + 2 = -3 (a negative number)
-5 + 5 = 0 (neither negative nor positive)
If the negative number has greater magnitude than the positive number, the sum will be negative
If the positive number has greater magnitude than the negative number, the sum will be positive
If the negative and positive numbers have the same magnitude, the sum will be zero.
No. The sum of a positive integer and a negative integer has the same sign as the larger integer.
No, -3 + 8 = 5.
The statement is: "Their sum is always an integer." Whether the sum is negative or positive depends on the two original integers.
Not necessarily. That only applies if the positive integer is greater than the negative integer in absolute value.An integer.
The sum of a positive integer and a negative integer is positive when the positive integer is greater. For example: 9 + (-5) = 4 In this case, the positive integer 9 is greater than the negative integer 5. Therefore, the sum is positive.
No. The sum of a positive integer and a negative integer has the same sign as the larger integer.
It depends, if a number with positive integers is greater than the number with the negative integer therefore the sum will be in positive integer. And if the number with positive integer is less than the number with the number with negative integer then the sum will be in negative integer.
yes
No, -3 + 8 = 5.
False.
The statement is: "Their sum is always an integer." Whether the sum is negative or positive depends on the two original integers.
Not necessarily. That only applies if the positive integer is greater than the negative integer in absolute value.An integer.
The sum of a positive integer and a negative integer is positive when the positive integer is greater. For example: 9 + (-5) = 4 In this case, the positive integer 9 is greater than the negative integer 5. Therefore, the sum is positive.
subtract the negative from the positive
It's not always. 7 + (-3) = 4
Only when the integers are the same but otherwise no.
No. The answer depends on the context in terms of which the numbers are considered to be opposite.