The numbers 0 and 1; all negatives; all decimals; and all fractions are neither prime nor composite.
The property of prime or composite applies only to integers. All other numbers (non-integer rationals and all irrational numbers) are neither prime nor composite. Within integers, 0 and 1 are neither prime nor composite.
Two is prime. All other even numbers are composite.
Look up a table of prime numbers. All those numbers that are not prime, are composite - except 1, which is neither prime nor composite.
It is composite, like all even numbers other than 2. It is the product of 2 x 3. All integers are either prime or composite. Only 0 is neither.
Yes. All prime numbers and composite numbers are positive integers, or whole counting numbers. That leaves infinitely many numbers that are neither prime nor composite. If you intended to narrow the scope of your question to the whole counting numbers or to the positive integers, then there are NO such numbers that are neither. A counting number, however large, will be either prime or composite.
Yes except 3 itself which is neither composite or prime
So we eliminate prime numbers. Note that the number 1 is neither prime nor composite. We have left:4689101214151618202122242526272830323334353638394042444546484950515254555657586062636465666869707274757677788081828485868788909192939495969899100
The number 1 is neither prime nor composite.
Prime numbers: 2 3 5 and 7 Composite numbers: 4 6 8 9 and 10 Note that 1 is neither a prime or a composite number
All are prime numbers except 1. 1 is neither prime nor composite.
Zero is composite because it has all the real numbers as factors.