All whole numbers (integers) are rational as they can be expressed in the form n/1.
3 can be written as 3/1 : 84 as 84/1 : 1367 as 1367/1 .....and so on.
It is rational and also a whole number.
Some are, but all are not. 2/1 is rational and whole but 1/2 is rational and not whole. So the answer is a rational number is not necessarily a whole number.
Because all whole numbers are rational. 10 can be written as 10/1.
56 is a rational whole natural number. Or to put it another way: 56 is a Natural number, but as all natural numbers are also whole numbers 56 is also a whole number, but as all whole numbers are also rational numbers 56 is also a rational number. Natural numbers are a [proper] subset of whole numbers; Whole numbers are a [proper] subset of rational numbers. The set of rational numbers along with the set of irrational numbers make up the set of real numbers
All whole numbers are rational. 10 = 10/1, as a ratio
Every whole number is rational.
It can be written as a fraction, so it is rational. It is not an integer, whole number or irrational.
Yes. In fact, every whole number is a rational number.
It is rational. It is a whole number so it cannot be irrational.
Every whole number is rational.
The set of rational numbers includes all whole numbers, so SOME rational numbers will also be whole number. But not all rational numbers are whole numbers. So, as a rule, no, rational numbers are not whole numbers.
Every irrational number is NOT a rational number. For example, sqrt(2) is irrational but not rational. A natural number is a counting number or a whole number, such as 1, 2, 3, etc. A rational number is one that can be expressed as a ratio of two whole numbers, which may be positive or negative. So, -2 is a rational number but not a counting number (it is an integer, though). Also, 2/3 is a rational number but not a whole, counting number or a natural number.