Yes.
If it is a composite number, it is divisible by at least one prime number.
A composite number is the product of two or more prime numbers. A prime number has exactly two factors, 1 and the number itself; a composite number has at least one more factor than the two that a prime number has.
A prime number is a whole number that has only two distinct factors: 1 and the number itself. A composite number has at least three distinct factors.
Prime numbers have two factors, composite numbers have more than two.
Prime numbers have two factors, composite numbers have more than two.
The least 1 digit number that is composite is 4. It is because all numbers before that are prime.
Prime numbers have two factors, composite numbers have more than two.
No composite numbers are prime. A composite number is a number that can be made by multiplying other numbers. A prime number is made only by one and itself. Therefore no number can be both prime and composite
No, You can't change a composite number to prime number.
Prime factorization never includes a composite number. All numbers in prime factorization must be prime numbers.
No, prime numbers have only two factors: 1 and itself. Composite numbers have at least 3 factors.
Do a quick search on the Web to get a list of prime numbers; all numbers greater than 1 that are not prime are composite. (That is, 0 and 1 should not be listed as "prime numbers", nor as "composite numbers".) Composite numbers are numbers that have at least three factors. A composite number can be divided evenly by 1, itself, and another number. From zero to fifty, they are 2,4,6,8,9,10,12,14,15,16,18,20,21,22,24,25,26,27,28,30,32,33,34,35,36,38,39,40,42,45,46,48, and 49.