0.1429
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.
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.
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 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.
Yes. Any irrational number can be divided by itself to produce 1, which is a rational number.
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.
Any already rational number
Yes, -1/2 is a rational number