No as 5, 15 and an infinite amount of other multiples of 5 are odd
All of the numbers between 5 and 45 are multiples, even if only of themselves.
All the even numbers and all the odd multiples of 5.
no, for example 25 cannot be divided by 2 Half of the multiples of 5 are even numbers. For instance, out of the first ten (5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50) five of them are even numbers.
Even numbers have to end with 2, 4, 6, 8, or 0. And multiples of 5 have to end in 5 or 0.
Even. Numbers ending in zero are multiples of 10, and 10 = 5 x 2, so all multiples of 10 are even.
All decimals, and all whole numbers that do not end in zero or 5, are not multiples of 5 .
It is not possible it has to be an even number.Plus it has no times or division numbers.
Multiples of 50 are the only numbers that are both. All other multiples of 5 aren't.
All multiples of 5 are numbers ending in either 5 or 0.
60 and all multiples of 60.
Not AllTo find out if all numbers that have 5 as a factor have 2 as a factor, you can list the multiples of each. 5's multiples are 5, 10, 15, 20...2's multiples are 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20...5 and 15 are multiples of 5, but not 2, so all numbers that have 5 as a factor DO NOT have 2 as a factor.It is not really necessary to write that all out because the fact that 5 is an odd number and 2 is only a factor of even numbers indicates that all numbers that have 5 as a factor would not have 2 as a factor. Only the multiples of 5 that are even have 2 as a factor also.
Multiples of 5 in even numbers occur when an even number is divisible by 5. Since even numbers are integers that are divisible by 2, a multiple of 5 in an even number would be a number that is divisible by both 2 and 5. This means the number must be a multiple of 10, as 10 is the least common multiple of 2 and 5. Examples of such numbers include 10, 20, 30, and so on.