No.
There is no such thing as a coprime number.Two integers are said to be relatively prime (or coprime) if they have no common positive factor, other than 1. Examples:Any two different prime numbers are coprime.16 and 27 are coprime.14 and 18 are not coprime. They have the common factor 2.
One. The two numbers are coprime.
There is not a specific name. They need not be coprime since 2 is not in the 4 times table but 2 and 4 are non coprime.
The answer will depend on whether or not the relationship between the pairs of variables is transitive. In mathematics, not all relationships are transitive.For example, if the relationship is "is coprime with", then2 is coprime with 3, 3 is coprime with 4 but 2 is certainly not coprime with 4.
coprime numbers with 18 are : 17 and 19.
14/33 cannot be reduced further because the two numbers have no factor in common- they are coprime.
The two number have no common prime factors. i.e. the HCF(14, 15) = 1; they are coprime.
No. They are both multiples of 2.
The term "coprime" refers to two numbers that have no common positive integer factors other than 1. The coprime of 64 could refer to any integer that does not share any prime factors with 64. Since 64 is (2^6), any odd number (like 1, 3, 5, etc.) would be coprime to 64, as they do not share the factor of 2.
1. The two numbers are coprime.
1. The two numbers are coprime.
9 (factors 1, 3, and 9) and 10 (factors 1, 2, 5, and 10) are coprime numbers. Numbers are coprime (also called relatively prime) if 1 is their only common factor.