No.
Negative numbers are smaller than zero and are considered less than positive numbers. For example, -1 is smaller than 0, and -5 is smaller than -1. The further a negative number is from zero, the smaller its value. Thus, all negative numbers are less than any positive number.
No. Odd numbers can be greater than, smaller than, or equal to prime numbers.
None. If a number is smaller than 36 it cannot be greater than 89.
Yes.
Yes.
The least common factor of any set of integers is 1. The least common multiple can never be smaller than the larger of the two starting numbers.
The LCM of a set of numbers can never be smaller than the largest number in the set.
No. At most, it can be equal to the smaller number.
No, it is never bigger than the smaller number.
No, it is never bigger than the smaller one.
A number can't have a factor greater than itself, so the GCF of a pair of numbers can't ever be greater than the smaller number. The GCF of 9 and 18 is 9.
I can't give you an example of when that happens because that doesn't ever happen. The GCF of a pair of numbers can't be larger than the smaller number.
The LCM for any pair of natural numbers can be as big as their product.
All numbers smaller than 48.
No. Odd numbers can be greater than, smaller than, or equal to prime numbers.
Negative numbers are smaller than positive numbers.
If one of the numbers is zero, zero point something or a negative number. Zero point something is a decimal starting with 0, eg. 0.4, 0.123