Its impossible if they are both absolute value with different signs. If they have different signs one would be absolute value and one would be negative value.
No.
2.25 absolute value of anything means remove the negative sign if there is one
Yes... that is, if one is the opposite of the other. For example: The absolute value of 6 is 6. The absolute value of -6 is 6. The absolute value is just the units a number is away from its orgin.
It is one and one fourth. Absolute value just means how far the number is from 0, so even if the number is negative, for example -2, it is only 2 numbers away from 0. So the absolute value of -2 is 2. TIP: Absolute value = same number, NEVER negative.
1/2 (one half) and minus one half has the same value Usually denoted as |1/2| The standard definition of absolute value is that the number must be positive or zero. But usually absolute value is applied to integers, rather than rational, real or imaginary numbers, while the concept is meaningless when applied to whole (or counting) numbers.
The absolute value of negative forty one is forty one.
It is one more.
One and three fourths. Absolute value technically is the number's positive form. Absolute value of -9.52937605876 is 9.52937605876.
Absolute value of negative one and one-third is positive one and one-third.
Its impossible if they are both absolute value with different signs. If they have different signs one would be absolute value and one would be negative value.
What's your question? To solve an absolute value inequality, knowledge of absolute values and solving inequalities are necessary. Absolute value inequalities can have one or two variables.
No.
2.25 absolute value of anything means remove the negative sign if there is one
Yes... that is, if one is the opposite of the other. For example: The absolute value of 6 is 6. The absolute value of -6 is 6. The absolute value is just the units a number is away from its orgin.
The absolute value is the [unsigned] difference between two values. It tells you how far one value is from another.
No, the absolute value of zero is already zero, so there is no integer with an absolute value of zero.