There are no GCFs of one number, but I'm sure you just mean factors.
So, the factors are:
1, 2, 5, 10, 25, 50
(Technically, 1 is not a factor, and neither is 50, because factors of a number are any number that goes into it other than 1, and their-selves, but i thought I'd include them anyways)
I'll exchange them for the numbers you want to know the GCF of.
The factors of 15 are: 1, 3, 5, 15The factors of 27 are: 1, 3, 9, 27The common factors are: 1, 3The Greatest Common Factor (GCF) is: 3
50-50 methods = 0
50
10 percent off 50 = 4510% off of 50= 10% discount applied to 50= 50 - (10% * 50)= 50 - (0.10 * 50)= 50 - 5= 45
It is: 15
The GCF is 9.
The GCF is 6.
5 and 10
One per set of numbers.
The GCFs are 2, 1, 3, 1 and 1
Since numbers don't stop, GCFs don't either. To Infinity and beyond!
They aren't. 5 is the GCF of 35 and 75. It is the largest number that divides into both 35 and 75 evenly.
That's backwards. The GCF of 160 and 20 is 20.
2 and 4 are factors of 8. GCFs happen when you compare two or more numbers.
You need at least two numbers to find a GCF. If that's 55 and 9, or 5 and 59, their GCFs are both 1.
I'll exchange them for the numbers you want to know the GCF of.