A number cannot be greater than and less than -1 at the same time.
It can be greater than or equal to, but not strictly greater or lesser.
The statement is false. if any or both of numbers are less than 1, the product is less than the greater (or both) of the numbers. Eg. 1/2 x 1/3 = 1/6 ; 1/6 < 1/2 and 1/6 < 1/3
three less than four = 1 1< *number* > 4 times the sum of the number + 1 1 < *number* > 5 So all numbers that are greater than one but less than five. 2, 3, 4
-1 is greater than -5. Think of it as moving to the right on a number line. Those numbers to the right are greater than those to the left.
No. If one of the numbers is 0 it is less; if one of the numbers is 1 it is the same as one of them; otherwise the product is greater than either
1.45-.12 is 1.33 which is greater than 1
Numbers greater than 1 have reciprocals less than 1. Numbers less than 1 have reciprocals greater than 1.
Three numbers that are less than 2 and greater than -1 are -0.5, 0, and 1.5. These numbers fall within the range of -1 and 2 on the number line, satisfying the given conditions.
No. Negative numbers are less than 0.
All numbers greater than or equal to 0.5 and less than 1.5.
Products will be greater unless your number set includes a number less than 1.
If their GCF is 1, their LCM is their product. If their GCF is greater than 1, their LCM is less than their product.
For integers, 2 through 49.
No. A rational number is ANY number that can be represented as one integer over a second integer (which cannot be zero). There is no requirement that the top integer is less than the bottom integer (an improper fraction is still a rational number - all integers are rational numbers as they can be represented as an improper fraction with a 1 as the denominator). Only if both rational numbers are less than 1 will the result of multiplying them together be less than both of them. If one rational number is greater than 1 and the other less than 1, then the result of multiplying them together is greater than the number less than 1 and less than the number greater than 1. If both rational numbers are greater than 1, then the result of multiplying them together is greater than both of them.
yes because it is greater than 1
counting numbers greater than 1but less than 10 = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9
none. all numbers, decimal or integer, less than -18 are also less than -1.
The statement is false. if any or both of numbers are less than 1, the product is less than the greater (or both) of the numbers. Eg. 1/2 x 1/3 = 1/6 ; 1/6 < 1/2 and 1/6 < 1/3