Vocabulary: Natural numbers: Ex. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, ... Whole numbers: Ex. 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5,... Integers: Ex. ... ­4, ­3, ­2, ­1 , 0, 1, 2, 3, ... Rational numbers: Ex. 6.27; 8.222222 where you can write it as 8.2; 3/4 Irrational numbers: Ex. Real numbers: All rational and irrational numbers. 1 Ex 1: Circle all of the sets to which each number belongs. a. 17 natural whole integer rational irrational b. 0 natural whole integer rational irrational c. ­23 natural whole integer rational irrational d. 14 3 natural whole integer rational irrational e. 8.16 natural whole integer rational irrational f. √2 natural whole integer rational irrational 2 Counterexamples prove a statement false. You only need one counterexample to prove a statement false. Are these statements true or false? If false, prove it with a counterexample. All whole numbers are rational numbers. The square of a number is always greater than the number. All whole numbers are integers. No fractions are whole numbers. All negative numbers are integers. Every multiple of 3 is odd. No positive number is less than its absolute value. No negative number is less than its absolute value. All integers are rational numbers 3 Comparing and Ordering Real Numbers: is less than is equal to is greater than is less than or equal to is not equal to is greater than or equal to 4 Ex 2: Comparing Real Numbers a. ­1 ____ 1 b. 0.5 ____ 5 c. 1 ____ 1 6 8 d. ­3 _____ ­4 5 5 e. 0.12 ____ 0.012 Ordering Fractions: Order these fractions from least to greatest. ­ 3 1 ­ 5 ­ 8 , 2 , 12 5 Def: Two numbers are opposites if they are the same distance from 0 on a number line. Ex. Def: The absolute value of a number is its distance from 0 on a number line. You write “the absolute value of ­3” as Ex. 6 Ex 3: Finding Opposite and Absolute Values a. Find the opposite of 8. b. Find the opposite of ­4. c. Find |­7| d. Find ­|­12| e. Compare |3| ____ |­5| f. Compare |9+1| ____ ­10 . g. Simplify 41 ­ 38 6 7