No, 3 isn't a multiple of 6 because the first multiple of 6 is 6. 3 is a factor of 6. 6 is a multiple of 3.
3 is a multiple of 1 and it is a multiple of 3.
1 x 3 = 3
3 x 1 = 3
No. Three is a factor of nine. Nine is a multiple of three.
6, 12, 18 and so on.
Yes and a few other nos.
Yes.
One and three are the only multiples of six and nine.
Yes 642 is a multiple of three
No.
The multiples of 6 are infinite. There is no largest one.
The least common multiple (LCM) refers to a multiple that is COMMON to two or more numbers. You have only one number in the question! The least multiple of a number is itself.
If you take three consecutive odd (or three consecutive even) numbers, one of the three will always be a multiple of 3.If you take three consecutive odd (or three consecutive even) numbers, one of the three will always be a multiple of 3.If you take three consecutive odd (or three consecutive even) numbers, one of the three will always be a multiple of 3.If you take three consecutive odd (or three consecutive even) numbers, one of the three will always be a multiple of 3.
400 is one such multiple.
Three is not a multiple of six. Six is a multiple of three. And three is a factor of six.
Assuming you mean "divisible", yes it is. One dozen is twelve, so two dozen is twenty-four, which is a multiple of three. An easy way to test if a number is a multiple of three is by adding up the digits; if it gives you another multiple of three, you're dealing with a multiple of three (2 + 4 = 6, 6 is a multiple of three, so 24 is too)
The LCM is: 6
If you mean what is the multiple OF three, the answer is 9
It is 0.7
To be a multiple of 6 a number must be even and a multiple of 3.356 is not a multiple of three. The short cut to that is if the digits add up to a multiple of three then the original number is a multiple of 3.
No, 28 could not be a multiple of 3.No. 28 divided by three is not a whole number, so it is not a multiple of three.
The largest five-digit multiple of three is 99,999
One and three are the only multiples of six and nine.
1.375 = One and three hundred seventy-five thousandths.