No.
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.
No.
A number can have an infinite number of multiples since multiples are obtained by multiplying the number by a whole number.
No.
If you're talking about the same number, no. Apart from the number itself, all factors of a number are smaller than its multiples. Factors go into numbers, numbers go into multiples.
The limit is infinity if the factors do not have to be whole numbers. If you stipulate that the factors have to be whole numbers, then, yes, for each number, there is a limit to how many factors it has. For example, the number 4 has only 3 whole-number factors: 1, 2, and 4.
multiples
109 whole numbers greater than 9 and less than 999 are multiples of 9
All whole numbers are multiples of one. The number is infinite.
Are you looking at a list ? Come on now ... are you ? 610 and every tenth whole number bigger than 610 are multiples of ten that are greater than 600. There are an infinite number of them.
It appears as if A and B are both multiples of a whole number C.
ALL positive multiples of 11 are greater than zero. There are an infinite numberof them. The smallest five are 11, 22, 33, 44, and 55.To generate more of them on your own, follow this procedure:-- Pick any whole number.-- Multiply your number by 11.-- You now have a multiple of 11 that's greater than zero.