It was both; there were robber barons, scandals, kickbacks and The Tweed Ring situation, making it negative, but there was also some good that came out of it, like urbanization, sky scrapers, elevators, and more sanitary cities and more jobs. I hope this helps
it has many like- It can entertain.... It can pass time... it can educate... it can inspire... it can teach... it can change...
I've been asking myself that question for the longest time. I know that it has a natural barrier that keeps invaders out and that it had a very arid climate. but thats pretty much all I know.
the Internet is both negative and positive, positive in the way that you can more easily get information, talk to your friends who are located on the other side of the planet, and more. negative in the way of hackers, rippers etc -Spownkie
It opens at 10:00....
An electric charge can be either negative or positive. The smallest quantity of negative charge is the amount represented by one electron, and this is exactly equal to the amount of positive charge represented by one proton. In practice, charge is measured in coulombs (C). Normally, atoms have identical numbers of protons and electrons, so atoms are normally neutral. Atoms that are charged are called 'ions'. A 'positive ion' has an overall positive charge, which means it has more protons than electrons. A 'negative ion' has an overall negative charge, which means it has more electrons than protons. 'Free electons' are negatively-charged sub-atomic particles that have become detached from an atom. Most metals have an abundance of free electrons, and it is a drift of these free electrons that constitute an electric current. In electrolytes (conducting fluids) a current is usually a movement of positive or negative ions. In both cases, an electric current is a drift of electrical charge. An electric current is measured in amperes (A). The ampere is an SI base unit, and defined in terms of the force between parallel, current-carrying conductors, due to their magnetic fields. A coulomb is an SI derived unit, defined in terms of current and time, as an ampere second.
Positive time negative = Negative.
Positive
Yes, any time you multiply a negative by a negative, it automatically becomes a positive.
Yes, the only time a quotient is negative is when a negative and a positive number are divided.
No. It is actually a negative. Yes it is positive. Previous answer was incorrect. Negative times negative = positive. example: -5 x -5 = +25
The 2 positive integers don't affect the sign. Every time you multiply by a negative number, the sign changes, so you have negative, positive, negative, positive... Since the number of negative numbers is odd, the end result is negative.The 2 positive integers don't affect the sign. Every time you multiply by a negative number, the sign changes, so you have negative, positive, negative, positive... Since the number of negative numbers is odd, the end result is negative.The 2 positive integers don't affect the sign. Every time you multiply by a negative number, the sign changes, so you have negative, positive, negative, positive... Since the number of negative numbers is odd, the end result is negative.The 2 positive integers don't affect the sign. Every time you multiply by a negative number, the sign changes, so you have negative, positive, negative, positive... Since the number of negative numbers is odd, the end result is negative.
negative time negative equal positive
A positive number multiplied by another positive number yields a positive number. A negative number multiplied by another negative number also yields a positive number. Only multiplying a negative number by a positive number (or the other way around) yields a negative number as the product.
If it's a pregnancy test the answer is no, A test can come back negative even though its positive. But if it's positive, it's positive 99% of the time.
Its like reversing the procedure of minus. For example, in -(-1) , you are actually inverting the minus sign with the minus sign outside the bracket to become a positive 1. So in general, -(-x) is equal to x. well every time you see negative x negative gives you a positive. and a negative time a positive makes it negative. here are some examples: (-) (-)= (+), (-) (+)= (-)
a line
It is possible to have inconclusive test results, but not to test both positive and negative at the same time.