4,5,6
Natural numbers consist of the set of all whole numbers greater than zero.
There is only one such set.One way to define the set is {x: x in N, x > 42}.
set of all even natural numbers less than 9 Answer = {1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8}
an empty set
That infinite list would include all of the natural numbers, minus only the first 100. It begins at 101 and continues infinitely.
Natural numbers consist of the set of all whole numbers greater than zero.
Yes.
Yes.
The Natural numbers is the set of Integers greater than 0 (ie {1, 2, 3, ...})
If you mean larger by "the set of whole numbers strictly contains the set of natural numbers", then yes, but if you mean "the set of whole numbers has a larger cardinality (size) than the set of natural numbers", then no, they have the same size.
There are more irrational numbers than rational numbers. The rationals are countably infinite; the irrationals are uncountably infinite. Uncountably infinite means that the set of irrational numbers has a cardinality known as the "cardinality of the continuum," which is strictly greater than the cardinality of the set of natural numbers which is countably infinite. The set of rational numbers has the same cardinality as the set of natural numbers, so there are more irrationals than rationals.
There is only one such set.One way to define the set is {x: x in N, x > 42}.
The set of natural numbers less than four is {1, 2, 3}.
Yes. Even numbers greater than 100 is a well defined set. (Although it is a set with an infinite number of members)
An Archimedean property is the property of the set of real numbers, that for any real number there is always a natural number greater than it.
The set of counting numbers greater than one.
Natural numbers are the same as counting numbers, but the term positive numbers means something else. Natural or counting numbers are positive integers, but the category of positive numbers includes both integers and fractions, as long as they are greater than zero.