Yes.
Yes.
The answer is 7 and 10. 7+10=17 10-7=3
It belongs to any set that has -17 amongst its members.Given that this is schoolwork, the answer teacher probably wants is: the set of integers.It also belongs to the set of rational numbers, the set of negative integers, the set of real numbers, the set of complex numbers, the set {43.2, 98, -17, pi} and an infinite number of others.It belongs to the set of complex numbers in spite of having no 'imaginary' part. Real numbers are just special cases of complex number in which the imaginary part happens to be zero. Rational numbers are special cases of real numbers. Integers are special cases of rational numbers.
17 of them. 17 of them. 17 of them. 17 of them.
Yes. It's exactly equal to the ratio of -17 to 10, which is rational.
Yes because all rational numbers can be expressed as fractions
-17/10 = -1.7
17 is a rational number.
17. Rational numbers are numbers that can be written as a fraction. Irrational numbers cannot be expressed as a fraction.
its real, rational, and an integer
There are an infinite number of rational numbers between 17% and 42%. 0.1700000001 % is one such.
It can be expressed as a fraction, like as 17 over 1.
It can be expressed as a fraction, like as 17 over 1.
Yes, -17.1 is a rational number. It can be easily expressed in terms of -17 1/10 or -171/10.
Yes.
It can be written as a fraction, so it is rational.