every number except has atleast 2 factors
1 times a number equals itself. The number is the first on the list of multiples.
Yes, and the multiplier is 1.
If it's a whole-number "multiple" and the number itself is positive,then the multiple is always greater than the number itself.
It has to be a whole number, or else every number would be a multiple of every other number.
The number itself is the first multiple.
Every whole number (obviously not 0) is a multiple of 1.
Every whole number, except 1, satisfies this requirement since it would be the product of 1 and the number itself.
No. Every non-zero whole number is a multiple of 1.
Every whole number that ends with ' 5 ' or ' 0 ' is a multiple of 5 . Every whole number that ends with ' 0 ' is a multiple of 10.
Neither. A for every decimal number (which may itself be a whole number), there is a smaller whole number and for every whole number there is a smaller decimal number.
Yes.