Yes.
The sign for "is greater than" is > and means that the value on the left is greater than that on the right.
X > Y means that X is greater than Y
The opposite direction is always read as "is less than" and is also read from left to right.
A < B means A is less than B
.... although that means that B is greater than A, it is not read, or used, that way. If you want to indicate that B is greater than A you need to put it as B > A.
yes
The sum of two decimal numbers greater than 0.5 will always be greater than 1
No. 1^99999999 is not greater than 1^1.
The product is not always greater than 1.
yes 0.7 is greater than 0.6999
If you want to know if 1.2 is greater or less than 1.20 well, 1.2 is greater than 1.20 because remember a decimal number with a zero in it it is always greater than the number with no zero's.
The sum of two decimal numbers greater than 0.5 will always be greater than 1
No the area is almost always greater.
Yes, a prime number is always greater than 1.
Yes.
yes it changes the direction, and increases the force
yes the radius of a regular polygon is always greater than the apothem
No. If you are talking about "velocity", then you are talking about magnitude and direction - i.e., vectors. You can't really compare vectors, in the sense of one vector being greater than another; but you can compare their magnitudes - and the magnitude is always non-negative. In this sense, you can't even have a "velocity of minus 4 m/s" - you would have a "velocity of 4 m/s in a certain direction".
No. 1^99999999 is not greater than 1^1.
-7
Always
The acceleration will be in the direction of the net force.
The product is not always greater than 1.