0.3333
-0.25 is the ratio of -1 to 4. Perfectly rational.
Any integer, whether positive or negative, is a rational number. It can be expressed as a fraction with a negative numerator and a denominator of 1.
It is rational. Any integer is a rational number, since it can be written in the form (integer)/1.Negative 101 can be written as (-101)/(1) , (101)/(-1) , (-303)/(3) , (78,163)/(-763) ,or an infinite number of other ratios of integers.
The rules for dividing negative numbers is the same as multiplying them. A negative number multiplied/divided by a negative number is positive and a negative number multiplied/divided by a positive number is negative.
The number -1/2 is a rational number, a negative integer divided by a positive integer.
Negative 1 is a rational number. It is an integer (though not a counting number) and all integers are rational.
Yes, -1/2 is a rational number and it's also negative.
Minus two.Some rational numbers are positive, some are negative. -9 is a negative rational number.
Yes, negative numbers can most certainly be rational. A rational number is simply a number which can be expressed as a fraction. An example of a negative rational number is: -1/2
Negative 12 itself is a rational number. It's the ratio of -12 to 1 .
Any number, rational or irrational, can be divided by 1 and itself. A number divided by 1 does not change, and a number divided by itself is equal to 1. The definition of a rational number is a number which can be expressed as the ratio of two integers. So there is division involved, but not the kind you thought.
Yes. It's the ratio of negative 1 to 1.
A rational number is any number that is not irrational - that is, it can be designated with numbers (2, -5, 0, 1/3, 0.14, etc.) A non-negative rational number number is exactly what it sounds like. It's any rational number that is not negative.
Yes. Any irrational number can be divided by itself to produce 1, which is a rational number.
Yes, -1/2 is a rational number
Any already rational number