A number can have an infinite number of multiples since multiples are obtained by multiplying the number by a whole number.
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.
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.
There are infinitely many multiples, just as there are infinitely many numbers. Just use the definition of "multiple". If you multiply 244 by any whole number, you get one of its multiples.
Mathematically speaking, there are infinitely many multiples of 365 (or of any other number) since you can multiply it by any whole number, of which there are infinitely many. Here's an example: 365 x 2 = 730.
Every number has infinitely many multiples.
Any number has an infinite number of multiples.
360 has an infinite number of multiples.
150150 has an infinite number of multiples.
There are an infinite number of multiples of six.
14 has an infinite number of multiples.