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Just itself and 1.

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Q: Can a prime number be a multiple of any number except itself?
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Can a prime number be a multiple of any other except itself?

A prime number is a multiple of itself and one.


Can a prime number be a multiple of any other number except for itself?

No prime is a multiple of any number other than itself and one.


What are the multiples of 2 in prime numbers?

No multiple of ' 2 ', except ' 2 ' itself, is a prime number.


Can a prime number be a multiple any other number except itself?

Yes. It is a multiple of 1.


Is every multiple of seven a composite number?

Yes except 7 itself which is a prime number


Can a prime number be a multiple of any other number except itself?

Yes as for example it can be a multiple of 1 because 1*3 = 3


Can a prime number be multiple of any other number except itself explain why or why not?

A prime number can be multiplied by any other numbers because all whole numbers are the product of prime numbers.


Can a prime number be a multiple of any other number except it self?

Yes. A prime number is a multiple of 1.


Why is there only 1 prime number?

well of course there are and infinite number of prime numbers there is not only one. If you thinking of the number 1, the number one is not prime because the definition of a prime number is that it must not have any multiples except one and itself. Since a number cannot have a multiple of itself that is the same number 1 is not prime


Can a prime number be a multiple of any number but itself?

By definition a prime number is divisible only by itself and 1, so it can't be a multiple of any other number.


Explain what a prime number is?

A prime number has no factors except itself and 1.


Why can't prime numbers be squared numbers?

A prime number is only divisible by itself and 1... A squared number is a multiple of itself - and thus is not a prime number !