Want this question answered?
5
Every sixth number will be a multiple of 6, so you need at least six consecutive numbers to guarantee that one of them will be divisible by 6.
Numbers which are a power of 2 (1,2,4,8,16,32,64,...) cannot be made by summing consecutive numbers.
2 and 3 are the only consecutive prime numbers.
7
5
Every sixth number will be a multiple of 6, so you need at least six consecutive numbers to guarantee that one of them will be divisible by 6.
numbers with patterns; consecutive numbers: 1,2,3,4... consecutive even numbers: 2,4,6,8... and many more Consecutive numbers are numbers that come one after another. For example 5, 6, 7 or 99 and 100.
Defining "consecutive" as "following continuously in unbroken or logical sequence," it is possible to have many different types of consecutive things: consecutive days, months, odd numbers, even numbers, etc. The list you have is consecutive, they are consecutive multiples of ten.
There are no consecutive rational numbers. Between any two rational numbers there are an infinity of rational numbers.
There are eight sets of 3 consecutive numbers in 12 hours.
Numbers which are a power of 2 (1,2,4,8,16,32,64,...) cannot be made by summing consecutive numbers.
2 and 3 are the only consecutive prime numbers.
Six of them.
7
It's any set of consecutive integers that are composite. For instance, 8, 9, and 10 are consecutive composites.
There are countably infinite (Aleph-Null) of such numbers.