Question
Which statement is true about the relationships between the number sets?(1 point)
Not all natural numbers are real numbers.
Whole numbers include all natural numbers and 0.
All rational numbers are also integers.
Some irrational numbers are also integers.
Not all natural numbers are real numbers.
Whole numbers include all natural numbers and 0.
All rational numbers are also integers.
Some irrational numbers are also integers.
Answers
Answer
Which of the following is true about −9
?
?
Answer
Which of the following is true about −9
?(1 point)
Responses
It is both an integer and a whole number.
It is both an integer and a whole number.
It is an integer but not a rational number.
It is an integer but not a rational number.
It is a whole number but not an integer.
It is a whole number but not an integer.
It is an integer but not a whole number.
?(1 point)
Responses
It is both an integer and a whole number.
It is both an integer and a whole number.
It is an integer but not a rational number.
It is an integer but not a rational number.
It is a whole number but not an integer.
It is a whole number but not an integer.
It is an integer but not a whole number.
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The true statement about the relationships between the number sets is:
**Whole numbers include all natural numbers and 0.**
To clarify the other statements:
- Not all natural numbers are real numbers: This is false, as all natural numbers are indeed real numbers.
- All rational numbers are also integers: This is false, as rational numbers include fractions and decimals, which are not integers.
- Some irrational numbers are also integers: This is false, as irrational numbers cannot be whole numbers or integers; they are distinct categories.
**Whole numbers include all natural numbers and 0.**
To clarify the other statements:
- Not all natural numbers are real numbers: This is false, as all natural numbers are indeed real numbers.
- All rational numbers are also integers: This is false, as rational numbers include fractions and decimals, which are not integers.
- Some irrational numbers are also integers: This is false, as irrational numbers cannot be whole numbers or integers; they are distinct categories.
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
It appears that your question about \( -9 \) is incomplete. Please provide the options or statements you would like to evaluate regarding \( -9 \), and I'd be happy to help determine which one is true!
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The true statement about \(-9\) is:
**It is an integer but not a whole number.**
To clarify the terms:
- **Integers** include positive numbers, negative numbers, and zero (e.g., ... -3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3 ...).
- **Whole numbers** include all natural numbers and zero, meaning they cannot be negative (e.g., 0, 1, 2, 3 ...).
Since \(-9\) is an integer (it is a whole number that can be negative), but it is not a whole number, this statement is correct.
**It is an integer but not a whole number.**
To clarify the terms:
- **Integers** include positive numbers, negative numbers, and zero (e.g., ... -3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3 ...).
- **Whole numbers** include all natural numbers and zero, meaning they cannot be negative (e.g., 0, 1, 2, 3 ...).
Since \(-9\) is an integer (it is a whole number that can be negative), but it is not a whole number, this statement is correct.
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