True.
No. You have it backwards . . . . . the absolute value of a negative number is always a positive number.
False
The absolute value is only ever positive. * * * * * Or 0.
The absolute value will always be positive because if you think about it, the absolute value.
Not sure what "this" is, but the conclusion is false.
true (that's the whole point of absolute value)
It is false because if it is the absolute value of a negative number, the answer would be higher than the original number. |-9|=9
The absolute value of a number is the positive (or non-negative) value of the number. The absolute value of 0 or a positive number is the number itself. The absolute value of a negative number is its positive equivalent.
Other than for the value 0, there are always two numbers that have the same absolute value: the number and the negative of the number, eg 2 and -2 both have the absolute value 2. There is no negative 0, so there is only the number 0 which has the absolute value 0.
No, it is not true that no negative number is less than its absolute value. In fact, all negative numbers are less than their absolute value. The absolute value of a negative number is always positive.
No. The absolute value of a number is the value of the number ignoring the sign - it is always positive: The absolute value of a negative number is a positive number; The absolute value of a positive number is a positive number.
Absolute values are never negative. The opposite, or negative, or additive inverse, of a negative number is the number's absolute value; a non-negative number is its own absolute value. The absolute values of 7 and -5, are, respectively, 7 and 5.