There is an infinite number of common multiples for 5 and 6. A common multiple of any two or more numbers is any number into which each of two or more numbers can be divided evenly (zero remainder).
The LCM of (5, 6, 7) is 210.
30, 60, 90, 120, 150
There is an infinite number of common multiples for 5 6 and 9. A common multiple of any two or more numbers is any number into which each of two or more numbers can be divided evenly (zero remainder). However, the least or lowest common multiple (LCM) of 5 6 and 9 is 90.
The common multiples of 5 and 6 are the multiples of their lowest common multiple (which is 30), so there are infinitely many common multiples of 5 and 6. The first five are: 30, 60, 90, 120, 150.
The LCM of two consecutive numbers is their product. The LCM of two consecutive multiples of 5 is their product divided by 5. Two consecutive numbers cannot be multiples of 5.
There is an infinite number of common multiples for 5 6 and 7. A common multiple of any two or more numbers is any number into which each of two or more numbers can be divided evenly (zero remainder). However, the least or lowest common multiple (LCM) of 5 6 and 7 is 210.
This cannot be answered because the common multiples of any two or more numbers are infinite.
30 is the Least Common Multiple of 2, 5 and 6. All multiples of 30 are divisible by 2, 5 and 6
Any multiple of 15.
The common multiples of 6 and 5 are 30, 60, 90, 120, 150, 180, and so on.
The least common multiples of the numbers 3,4 and 6 would be 12. This is a math problem.