Glencoe Math: Course 2, Volume 1
GM
Glencoe Math: Course 2, Volume 1 View details
1. Integers and Absolute Value
Continue to next subchapter

Exercise 11 Page 195

Positive numbers are numbers that are greater than 0. They can be written with or without a positive sign. Negative numbers are less than 0. They are always written with a negative sign.

- 7

Practice makes perfect
Positive numbers are numbers that are greater than 0. They can be written with or without a positive sign. Negative numbers are less than 0. They are always written with a negative sign. Here are some examples of both kinds of numbers.
positive numbers

With this information in mind, we want to write a positive or a negative integer that represents the given situation. Remember that integers are the set of whole numbers and their opposites.

A score that is 7 under par

The word under tells us that the score is below a certain level. This means that the score is decreasing. To express the reduction of an amount, we use a negative number. - 7

Extra

Opposite Numbers
Two numbers that are the same distance from 0 on a number line, but on opposite sides of 0, are called opposites.
number line
Opposite numbers have the same absolute value. Absolute value is what we call the distance that a number is from 0. |-7|=7 and |7|=7