Yes.
The LCM of two consecutive even numbers is their product divided by two.
The LCM of two numbers is one of the numbers when one of the numbers is a multiple of the other. The LCM of two numbers is the product of the numbers when they are relatively prime. In all other cases (like consecutive even numbers that aren't 2 and 4) the LCM is as you describe.
You need at least two numbers to find an LCM. If that's 12 and 11, the LCM of consecutive integers is their product.
The LCM of two consecutive numbers is always the product: 32 times 33=1056 1056=LCM
The LCM of any two consecutive numbers greater than zero is the two numbers multiplied together. eg. the LCM of 10 and 11 is: 10*11=110
There aren't two positive consecutive numbers that have an LCM of 200.There aren't two positive consecutive numbers that are multiples of 7.Other than that...
The LCM of two numbers is sometimes the product of the two numbers.
The LCM of two consecutive numbers is their product. The LCM of two consecutive multiples of 5 is their product divided by 5. Two consecutive numbers cannot be multiples of 5.
The product of the GCF and LCM of a pair of numbers is equal to the product of the numbers.
Yes,LCM of two numbers is their product.
The LCM of consecutive integers is their product. Consecutive integers will not both be multiples of seven.
The LCM of two numbers is their product if and only if the two numbers are co prime, that is their HCF is 1. Otherwise their LCM in not their product, in fact, it is their product divided by their HCF.