The 'greater than' sign is '>'. '<' is the 'less than' sign. If you were to say 'five is greater than 4', you could mathematically present that as '5>4'.
I would say no
I would say less then.
This means that whatever a given number "a" is, number "b" is larger that number "a". If you are trying to say equal or greater, it would be number "b" is either equal to number "a", or of larger value than "a".
.27 is less than .29 (and how did that other guy say yes? What a moron.)
The 'greater than' sign is '>'. '<' is the 'less than' sign. If you were to say 'five is greater than 4', you could mathematically present that as '5>4'.
I would say no
I would say less then.
I would say a lion
The symbol for greater than is >. If I were to say 9 is greater than 5, it would look like: 9 > 5. The other way to write it is 5 < 9, but this will translate to 5 is less than 9.
structuralist.
It is correct to say "I prefer this to that" (for example, "I prefer tea to coffee"). This would mean that you have a preference for, or favor, tea over coffee. "Than" is for comparisons: this is [more, greater, better, etc.] than that. But you would say "I would rather do this than that."
You didn't say what the numbers were but if the negative number was of greater value (for example -2 + 1) than your answer would be negative. But if the positive number had greater value (2 + -1) than your answer would be positive.
rather than saying 'could you sign up to this', say 'could you apply to this', form or whatever you want someone to sign or do.
Water has a greater density than ice.
500
NO it dosent i'll give you an example say the question was is 42 greater than 56 the answer would be no because 42 is below 56 do you get it now?