The greater than or equal to sign is "≥".
Greater than >Less than written on top of =.
greater than is
An inequality must have a greater than sign (>) OR a less than sign (<) OR a greater than or equal to sign (≥) OR a less than or equal to sign (≤).
"At least" is expressed with the "greater or equal" sign, for example, x >= 100. (I don't know how to draw the greater-or-equal sign here - it is a horizontal line beneath the greater sign).
The greater than or equal to sign is "≥".
Greater than >Less than written on top of =.
greater than is
An inequality must have a greater than sign (>) OR a less than sign (<) OR a greater than or equal to sign (≥) OR a less than or equal to sign (≤).
The sign is "greater than or equal to" or ≥
"At least" is expressed with the "greater or equal" sign, for example, x >= 100. (I don't know how to draw the greater-or-equal sign here - it is a horizontal line beneath the greater sign).
It means greater than or equal to
If ' A ' and ' B ' are equal . . . A =BIf ' A ' is greater . . . A > BIf ' A ' is smaller . . . A
>
No. To be an inequality, it must somewhere have a greater than, less than, greater-or-equal, or less-or-equal sign.
First of all, the question should be asked like: What does the greater and less than sign look like? Greater Than Sign - > Less Than Sign - < Equal To Sign - = Your Welcome!
SymbolName+addition sign, plus sign-subtraction sign, minus signx or ⋅multiplication sign÷ or /division sign=equal≠not equal<less than>greater than≤less than or equal to≥greater than or equal to#number sign( )parentheses&and (ampersand)%percentπpi|x|absolute value of x√square root!factorial±plus or minusˆcaret - to the power of