By finding two same numbers that when multiplied together equals the given whole number
A perfect square is a rational number equal to the square of a whole number.
The square root of 16 is 4 which is a whole number.
When the whole number is a perfect square, ie it is a whole number squared.
That doesn't really make sense. If you figure out the square root of the number, the whole point is to find a number which, when squared, gives you back the original number. Therefore, there is no such thing as a "square root that can't be squared".
The square root of 15 is not a whole number.
Its linear dimensions increase by that whole number.
The easiest way is to use the whole number as the numerator over the divisor 1.
A perfect square.
The whole number closest to the square root of 65 is 8. The whole number closest to the square root of 65 is 8.
if its square root is a whole number
Square, 16 units.
The square of every positive or negative even whole number is a positive even whole number. The square of every positive or negative odd whole number is a positive odd whole number. There are an infinite number of each kind.