A number is a multiple of ten if it ends with a zero in the units place. For example, 10, 20, and 150 are all multiples of ten because they conclude with the digit zero. Additionally, you can divide the number by ten; if the result is an integer with no remainder, then the number is a multiple of ten.
the higher multiple of ten
10 is both a factor and a multiple of itself.
Every whole number that ends with a zero is a multiple of ten. There are an infinite number of them.
the larger multiple
Halfway between any two multiples of ten is always a multiple of five because each multiple of ten is also a multiple of five. For example, if you take the multiples of ten 20 and 30, their halfway point is 25, which is a multiple of five. This holds true for any pair of multiples of ten, as the average will always yield a number divisible by five.
Yes.
Any multiple of ten ends with the digit 0.
I think you probably already know this but... one is a multiple for every number because every number is divisible by one example: 1 fits into ten ten times so it is divisible by one. I'm guessing this question was a joke so this answer will probably never be used but I don't care.
the higher multiple of ten
10 is both a factor and a multiple of itself.
10, 30, 50, 70, 90, etc
One million (1,000,000).
Every whole number that ends with a zero is a multiple of ten. There are an infinite number of them.
the larger multiple
To the nearest ten the number would be 90
Why the product of a multiple of ten and a multiple of ten will always have only one zero
Halfway between any two multiples of ten is always a multiple of five because each multiple of ten is also a multiple of five. For example, if you take the multiples of ten 20 and 30, their halfway point is 25, which is a multiple of five. This holds true for any pair of multiples of ten, as the average will always yield a number divisible by five.