It's ' 1 ', because (n times 1/n) = n/n = 1
One.
n x 1/n =n/n = 1
The negative reciprocal of a non-zero number x, is -1/x. And the negative reciprocal of that is -1/(-1/x) = -1*(x/-1) = x
It is always FALSE.
The reciprocal of any non-zero number is one divided by that number. The reciprocal of 0 is not defined. For example, if R(x) represents the reciprocal of x, then R(6) = 1/6 R(5/7) = 1 / (5/7) = 1*(7/5) = 7/5 R(x) = 1/x
Yes, it is."The name of the product of a non-zero number and its reciprocal is 1" is TAUTOLOGY.
The product of any non-zero number and its reciprocal is 1.
The product of any non-zero number & its reciprocal equals 1.
One.
Positive, for all non-zero real numbers.
A non-example of a reciprocal would be the number zero. This is because the reciprocal of a number ( x ) is defined as ( \frac{1}{x} ), and since division by zero is undefined, zero does not have a reciprocal. Additionally, any number that is not a non-zero number, such as a negative number or a fraction, also serves as a non-example if it cannot be inverted to produce a valid result.
n x 1/n =n/n = 1
Reciprocal of any non - zero number [other than 1 (because reciprocal of 1 is 1)]is always less than '1' .============================The first contributor disputes the change:Sorry, Anu. What about the non-zero number 0.5, whose reciprocal is 2 ? ? ?
The answer depends on what you mean by the "opposite" of a number. A reciprocal is one type of opposite: it is the multiplicative opposite.
The answer depends on what you mean by the "opposite" of a number. A reciprocal is one type of opposite: it is the multiplicative opposite.
A multiple
The multiplicative inverse of any non-zero number is its reciprocal, and the product of the two is 1. The inverse of -3.7 is 1/(-3.7) which is -0.270270... -3.7 * -0.270270... = 1