In the entire infinite supply of whole numbers, fractions, and decimals, whether
positive or negative, there is only one single number that is equal to 5280.
It is . . . . . 5280 .
There are no two consecutive numbers that equal 70 because the sum of any two consecutive numbers is an odd number.
The two consecutive numbers which when added equal 59 are 29 and 30.
The two consecutive even numbers are 180 and 182.
There are no two consecutive numbers that add or multiply to 102.
The numbers are 62 and 64 are two consecutive integers that equal 126.
The numbers are 16 and 17.
There are none. However there are two consecutive ODD numbers 299 and 301
Although not specified as such, "consecutive" requires the numbers to be integers. Two pairs literally means four numbers but there are not four consecutive integers that add up to to 5280. 1318 + 1319 + 1320 + 1321 = 5278 and 1319 + 1320 + 1321 + 1322 = 5282. Four consecutive numbers must add up to an even number that is not a multiple of 4. If by two pairs, the question meant ONE pair (!!), again there is no answer since the sum of any pair of consecutive numbers must be an odd number.
Not possible, two whole numbers can't equal to a number with a half.
No two consecutive whole numbers equal 0.5625 using the basic operations of arithmetic.
There are two consecutive even integers: 90 and 92.
89 x 90 = 8010 which are two consecutive two digit numbers that equal 8010.