7 of them.
The set of positive integers, of course!
The set of integers includes negative integers as well as positive integers. It also includes the number zero which is neither negative nor positive.
The set of positive integers does not contain the additive inverses of all but the identity. It is, therefore, not a group.
No, there are an infinite number of integers. So, there would be an infinite (infinity/2-1) number of positive integers. And, there would be an infinite (infinity-10) number of integers greater than ten.
The set of positive odd integers.
The set of positive integers less than 50 is finite (there are 49).The set of all integers less than 50 is infinite, because it includes an infinite number of negative numbers.
Oh honey, a finite set is like a shopping list - it has a clear end. Examples include a set of primary colors (red, blue, yellow), the days of the week (Monday to Sunday), or the planets in our solar system (sorry Pluto, you're out). Just think of it as a set with a nice little bow on top, all wrapped up and ready to go.
7 of them.
In ascending numerical order, the set of even positive integers less than 9 is: 2, 4, 6, 8
The set of positive integers, of course!
The set of negative integers.
The positive even integers are: 0 2 4 6 and 8
They are the negative integers.
No. Zero is neither positive nor negative, by definition. A positive number is greater than zero. A negative number is less than zero. Although, zero is a non-negative number (a set that includes all positive numbers and zero).
This is the 'null' or 'empty' set.There are no numbers greater than '-3' and less than '-9'.
Any positive whole number.