3 is the prime factor of 9.
three is prime nine equals three times three
It is 3
If the sum of the digits of a given number equals nine or a multiple of nine, nine is a factor of that number.
Nine cannot be a prime factor of any number because it is not a prime number.
Yes. Nine has one prime factor: 3
9 is a composite number but 3 is a prime number
36 according to the factor tree
8
917 divided by 7 equals 131
No, forty nine (49) is not a prime number. It is divisible by 7 and 1, besides itself.
The factors of nine are one, three, and nine. A factor is a whole number that when multiplied by another number equals the number you are factoring. So, the repeated multiplication for nine is 3 times 3.
Thirty-nine is NOT a prime number. It is composite.