No. A mean is another word for average. Can be negative, positive, or zero. As long as it adds 2 or more integers and divides it by the number of integers.
ill say a positive number
1, 2, and 3 are the first three positive integers, but you can't say that they're the first three positive numbers. If you try that, somebody is sure to come along and say "but what about 0.1, 0.2, and 0.3 ?"The fact is, nobody can say what the first (lowest) positive 'number' is. Whatever number you name, no matter how small it is, there is always another one that's smaller and still positive.
As far as positive numbers are concerned, the additive inverse of a positive number is a negative number with the same magnitude (i.e. the additive inverse of 5 is -5). It would be wrong to simply say that "negative" and "additive inverse" are correct, because the additive inverse of a negative number is a positive number.
Think of the temperature scale. Comfortable air temperature may be say (+)16 oC , but a very cold air temperature may be say -20 oC The figure is greater but the temperature is much less. So think of numbers in the same way.
That is correct. I would say, the square root of a number is another number that, when you multiply it by itself, gives you the number you started with. Remember that a positive number always has two square roots, one positive and one negative. The square roots of 49 are 7 and -7, since 7x7=49, and also -7x-7=49.
ill say a positive number
1, 2, and 3 are the first three positive integers, but you can't say that they're the first three positive numbers. If you try that, somebody is sure to come along and say "but what about 0.1, 0.2, and 0.3 ?"The fact is, nobody can say what the first (lowest) positive 'number' is. Whatever number you name, no matter how small it is, there is always another one that's smaller and still positive.
As far as positive numbers are concerned, the additive inverse of a positive number is a negative number with the same magnitude (i.e. the additive inverse of 5 is -5). It would be wrong to simply say that "negative" and "additive inverse" are correct, because the additive inverse of a negative number is a positive number.
well it depends if the negative is bigger than the positive or viseversa. lets say you have -5+7 it would equal 2. if it was -7+5 it would equal -2. In short, a positive number plus a negative number is the same thing as a positive number minus another positive number. Example: 3 + (-2) = 1 3 - 2 = 1
Favourable result.
To say one thing and mean another is sarcasm.
they mean that there 90% positive that he likes u
If you mean "each of its factors", then you might say "by definition". If a number is a factor of another number, then that means that the other number is a multiple.
Think of the temperature scale. Comfortable air temperature may be say (+)16 oC , but a very cold air temperature may be say -20 oC The figure is greater but the temperature is much less. So think of numbers in the same way.
The sum is always positive (and it never yields a prime number?)
You didn't say what the numbers were but if the negative number was of greater value (for example -2 + 1) than your answer would be negative. But if the positive number had greater value (2 + -1) than your answer would be positive.
to say differently