No. A multiple of an even number cannot be odd.
4 and 9
odd - even numbers are a multiple of 2.
No. Double any odd number. The result is even.
No. Odd numbers don't have even factors.
That depends what numbers. If you mean ALL even and odd numbers, the only common factor or divisor is 1.
27 cannot be a multiple of 4 because 27 is an odd number and 4 is an even number. No odd number can be a multiple of an even number, only even numbers can be multiples of even numbers.
No. Odd numbers only have odd factors. They could not have an even factor in common.
The GCF of any two odd numbers is always odd because odd numbers don't have any even factors. The GCF of any two even numbers is always even because even numbers are divisible by two and any common factors would have at least one two in common. The GCF of an even and an odd number is odd because odd numbers don't have any even factors.
All multiples of 6 are even numbers.
If you take three consecutive odd (or three consecutive even) numbers, one of the three will always be a multiple of 3.If you take three consecutive odd (or three consecutive even) numbers, one of the three will always be a multiple of 3.If you take three consecutive odd (or three consecutive even) numbers, one of the three will always be a multiple of 3.If you take three consecutive odd (or three consecutive even) numbers, one of the three will always be a multiple of 3.
They have only one thing in common. By adding 1 to either an even number or an odd number makes them opposite. (even becomes odd and odd becomes even).
Well, honey, that statement is as true as Dolly Parton's hair being fabulous. When you find the Least Common Multiple (LCM) of an odd and even number, the result will always be even because the LCM is the smallest number that both numbers can divide into evenly. And let's face it, odd numbers just can't hang with the even crowd when it comes to being even themselves.