No.
This is a common misconception. When testers swab your mouth, they are actually checking your DNA through cheek cells. So no, peppermint can not help pass a drug test.
It means the absolute value of the integer, or its distance from 0. Since a distance cannot be negative, the absolute value is always positive.
Yes, peppermint oil can kill brown marmorated pentatomids. The insects in question (Halyomorpha halys) can choke or drown in peppermint oil drenches. Drops and particles otherwise serve as deterrents and repellents since peppermint oil has a scent that is offensive and sticking to brown marmorated pentatomids.
Since it means to steal, it is negative.
The answer is -100, since negative multiplied by a positive is always negative, this has to be the answer.
Since a negative number is a term, it is a monomial.
The statement that lines of electric force begin and end only on electric charges is based on the principle that electric field lines represent the direction in which a positive test charge would move when placed in the field. Since positive charges repel each other and negative charges attract positive charges, electric field lines naturally begin on positive charges (sources) and end on negative charges (sinks).
-53 = -125, which is nearest you can get since the cube of a negative number MUST be negative.
The question is somewhat ambiguous since you do not define "opposite". If what you are asking is: is the negative of a negative sometimes negative, the answer is: No, never.
It makes a positive, since the two negative signs cancel each other out.
Since their face is made of bone and has teeth in the mouth, yes.
Your TV has horizontal lines as well as vertical lines. There has been no television production since 1974 that has any lines organize.