The first sentence in the Wikipedia article entitled "Cyclic Groups" states that "In algebra, a cyclic group is a group that is generated by a single element".
How is this consistent with addition on the set of integers being considered a cyclic group. What would be the single element that generates all the integers.?
Please don't tell me it is the element 1 :)
It is the element $-1$.
On a more serious note, the definition of "generates" includes allowing the inverse of the generating elements. For any group $G$, and element $g\in G$, the subgroup generated by $g$ is $$\{g^n:n\in\mathbb{Z}\}$$ not $$\{g^n:n\in\mathbb{N}\}$$ (the latter is not a subgroup unless $g$ has finite order).
Observe that $g^{-1}$ is always in $\{g^n:n\in\mathbb{Z}\}$.