Sagot :
Answer:
1. <
2. =
3. >
4. <
5. >
6. <
7. >
8. =
9. <
10. <
correct me if im wrong :)
Directions: compare each pair of integers using the symbols >, <, or =.
[tex]\large1.) \:\:-19\:\boxed{\green<}}}\:11[/tex]
[tex]\large2.) \:\:18\:\boxed{\green=}}}\:18[/tex]
[tex]\large3.) \:\:-3\:\boxed{\green>}}}\:-4[/tex]
[tex]\large4.) \:\:16\:\boxed{\green<}}}\:20[/tex]
[tex]\large5.) \:\:0\:\boxed{\green>}}}\:-5[/tex]
[tex]\large6.) \:\:-8\:\boxed{\green<}}}\:8[/tex]
[tex]\large7.) \:\:17\:\boxed{\green>}}}\:-11[/tex]
[tex]\large8.) \:\:-2\:\boxed{\green=}}}\:-2[/tex]
[tex]\large9.) \:\:-16\:\boxed{\green<}}}\:-13[/tex]
[tex]\large10.) \:\:6\:\boxed{\green<}}}\:17[/tex]
Remember: Every positive integers (+) are bigger than negative integers (-). 0 is bigger than negative numbers. In negative, Here are the exampes which is bigger:
[tex]-1\:\boxed{\green>}}}\:-300[/tex]
[tex]-78\:\boxed{\green>}}}\:-79[/tex]
[tex]-1,000\:\boxed{\green<}}}\:-999[/tex]
See, that's why smaller numbers of negative integers is bigger than larger number of negative integers.
#CarryOnLearning