A set of non-zero numbers.
The product of two nonzero whole numbers will be a nonzero whole number.
its negative
A whole number that is a factor of two or more nonzero whole numbers is a common factorThis would be called a common factor.common factor.a common factor
A common Factor
1
a common factor
The LCf of any two nonzero whole numbers is one because every nonzero whole number can be divided by it.
well, its quite simple: it is a natural number.
The quotient of two nonzero integers is the definition of a rational number. There are nonzero numbers other than integers (imaginary, rational non-integers) that the quotient of would not be a rational number. If the two nonzero numbers are rational themselves, then the quotient will be rational. (For example, 4 divided by 2 is 2: all of those numbers are rational).
That's the least common multiple, or LCM.
Yes, as long as the two nonzero numbers are themselves rational. (Since a rational number is any number that can be expressed as the quotient of two rational numbers, or any number that can be written as a fraction using only rational numbers.) If one of the nonzero numbers is not rational, the quotient will most likely be irrational.
Oh, dude, the product of two or more nonzero whole numbers is just the result you get when you multiply them together. It's like when you combine a bunch of numbers and they have a little math party, and the product is the final number that comes out of it. So, yeah, it's just the fancy math way of saying "the answer you get when you multiply stuff."