If you are dealing with real numbers no, but when you move into higher math which deals with expressions and abstracts, yes.
Yes, it is true that any number multiplied by 0 is 0. But zero is not considered a "multiple" (integral product) of any number.
0 is a multiple of any number, since n*0 = 0 so 6*0 = 0 and 0 IS a multiple.
Yes, 0 is an integer multiple of 3. An integer multiple of a number is obtained by multiplying that number by an integer. Since 0 can be expressed as 3 multiplied by 0 (3 × 0 = 0), it is indeed a multiple of 3.
That depends. If any number multiplied by 0 is equal to 0, then is 0 a multiple of no numbers, or every number... a tricky one.
0 ie Zero is a multiple of every number
Zero is a multiple of every whole number. This is because a multiple is defined as the product of a number and an integer, and since 0 multiplied by any integer is always 0, it follows that 0 is a multiple of all whole numbers.
A nonzero multiple of a number is a multiple which is not equal to 0.
Every whole number (obviously not 0) is a multiple of 1.
Yes. any number ending in 5 or 0 is a multiple of 5 and any number ending in 0 is a multiple of 10. (:
Well, honey, technically speaking, 0 is a multiple of every number under the sun, including 10. It's like the chameleon of the number world, blending in with whatever multiple you throw at it. So yes, darling, 0 is definitely a multiple of 10.
A multiple.
The number itself.