This is a nonsensical question. There are more than 13 multiples of 10 - in fact there are an infinite number. And there are multiples of 10 which have an infinite number of factors - so there cannot be a "largest" number of factors.
No. A factor is a number or algebraic expression by which another is exactly divisible. A multiple is a number that can be divided by another number without a remainder. Factors go into numbers, numbers go into multiples.
The number of multiples is infinite. There is no "last" one or "largest" one.
5, 10, 25, 50
Any number is a factor and a multiple of itself. Other factors are less than the number, other multiples are more. 5 is a factor of 10. 10 is a multiple of 5.
80
a multiple is the number you can make by multiplying a number with another number.ex: multiple of 10= 10,20,30,40,50,60 ...a factor is a number which, when multiplied by another number, produces a given number.ex: 5 is a factor of 20, so is 4a common factor is the largest number given in the problemex: the GCF of 30 and 42 is 6this was answered by a 12 year old.
2 and 5 are the prime factors that are common to all multiples of 10.
It depends on what they are compared to. In general, factors will be smaller than the number they are compared to, and multiples will be larger. Overall, factors tend to be smaller than multiples, but 20 is a factor of 40 and 10 is a multiple of 5, so there are exceptions.
MultiplesFor example: Multiples of two 2, 4, 6, 8, 10.The numbers after the "2" branch off of the "2." Factors are above the number.FactorsIn factoring, you are finding numbers that fit into the number you are trying to factor.For example: 201x20=202x10=204x5=20So the factors of 20 are 1, 2, 4, 5, 10, and 20.but the Multiples of 20 are 20, 40, 60, 80.Factors are under the number while Multiples are over the number.
Let's deny the premise. I don't think they are opposites. The opposite of a factor is a non-factor or a number that is not a factor and in special cases factors and multiples are the same. 10 is both a factor and a multiple of 10.
No.
There are only three positive integer factors of 4. Perhaps you meant multiples, of which there are an infinite number.