10 is a composite number because it has more than two factors
No, because prime and a composite number are the opposite and cannot be the same.
The number 10 is not prime. A prime number is divisble by itself and one, only. 10 is divisible by 1, by 2, and by 5. Thus, 10 is not a prime number.
no
No multiples of 10 are prime.
14 is the number that is opposite the number 10 on a dart board.
The 'opposite' status of a number that is not prime is a composite number.Except for 0 and 1, all numbers that are not prime (i.e. they are multiples of other numbers) are called composite numbers.The opposite of a prime number would be a number that is not prime. Almost all numbers that are not prime are composite numbers. A prime number is a number that has exactly two factors. A composite number has more than two factors. However, composite numbers do not include all numbers that are not prime. The number 1 has only one factor, so it is neither prime nor composite - it is unity.
A composite number is any whole number that isn't a prime number or 1. A prime number is a whole number that is only divisible by itself and 1.
-10
5 is the prime number.
The prime number less than 10 that, when added to either 10 or 20, results in a prime number is 3. When you add 10 to 3, you get 13, which is a prime number. Similarly, when you add 20 to 3, you get 23, which is also a prime number.
1 is not a prime number because it can be evenly divided by itself and by 1, the opposite as per the definition of a prime number.
3 is a prime number but 10 and 4 isn't