No.
False
yes a multiple is the answer of the number multiplied by a whole number
If it's a whole-number "multiple" and the number itself is positive,then the multiple is always greater than the number itself.
9, a divisor of 18, is greater than 4, a multiple of 2.
no
"a whole number that is a factor of two or more nonzero whole numbers is a ___ of the numbers" The answer is "Common Factor". "a whole number that is a factor of two or more nonzero whole numbers." from Ch. 4 - Factors, Fractions, and Exponents, link provided.
No. Every non-zero whole number is a multiple of 1.
If the last two digits of your target number are a multiple of 4, 4 is a factor of the whole number.
1 times a number equals itself. The number is the first on the list of multiples.
No - a smaller number can never be a multiple of a number, only a factor. But 4 is not a factor of 62, either.
No. Whatever multiple of the number you think might be the limit, you can always add the whole number again and have a larger multiple.
The term Greatest Common Multiple has no meaning; there is no such thing as a greatest multiple. There are the terms: Lowest Common Multiple (LCM) which is the smallest positive (whole) number which is a multiple of two, or more, numbers. eg LCM(4, 10) = 20 as 20 is the first number greater than 0 which is a multiple of both 4 and 10. Highest Common Factor (HCF), or Greatest Common Factor (GCF) which is the largest positive (whole) number that divides into all the numbers (without remainder); this can also said to be the largest positive number (whole) number which has all the numbers as some multiple of it. eg HCF(25, 60) = 5 since 5 is the highest positive (whole) number which divides into 25 and 60 (without remainder). The Lowest Common Factor of any set of numbers is 1 as 1 is the smallest positive (whole) number and it divides into every other (whole) number without remainder; this is not very useful.