Yes.
Numbers ending in zero are all multiples of 10, and therefore also are multiples of 2 and 5.
All multiples of 5 are numbers ending in either 5 or 0.
All numbers are divisible by ten but if you are referring to numbers that are divisible by ten and produce a whole number, you are referring to multiples of 10 or any number ending in 0.
It's false because there are other numbers ending 0 being multiples of 5.
Yes, all whole numbers ending in 0 are multiples of 5.
NO besause 5s multiples are only numbers that end with 0 and 5s so no.....!!!
Multiples of 2 are even numbers. All even numbers end in 0, 2, 4, 6 or 8.
Multiples of 10 always end with 0 because they are produced by multiplying 10 by whole numbers (0, 1, 2, 3, etc.). Since 10 is composed of the digits 1 and 0, any product involving 10 will retain the 0 in the units place. This pattern holds true for all integers multiplied by 10, leading to the consistent ending of 0 in all multiples of 10.
0, 2, 4, 6 and 8
5 can only go into numbers ending 5 or 0 12 can only go into numbers ending in even numbers 2 4 6 8 or 0 So 12 cannot go into numbers ending in 5 So 5 and 12 can only go into numbers ending 0 that are also multiples of 12 Answer: 60 120 180 240 300 360 420 and so on ...
If you start skip counting from 0 you will get all the numbers that are multiples of whatever number you are skip counting in.
All whole numbers ending with 0 or 5 are divisible by 5 except 0 itself