It doesn't exist. Numbers are infinite.
The Greatest common multiple of 33 and 6 is 3.
Any multiple of the least common multiple (264) is a common multiple, so there is no greatest.
The greatest common multiple of any set of integers is infinite.
3 and 36 because 1x36=36 is the least multiple for 36 and 3x1 is the greatest multiple for 3
There is no "greatest common multiple" for any pair of numbers. If you meant greatest common factor, the answer is 3.
The greatest common multiple is an infinite amount and not very practical for problem solving.
3
There is no such number. If X were a common multiple of 4 and 3 then a number of the form k*X (where k is any integer) would also be a multiple. There is no limit to how large k can be and so no greatest multiple.
There is no greatest common multiples for whatever common multiple is claimed to be the greatest the lowest common multiple of the numbers (in this case 15) can be added to get an even greater common multiple.
The greatest multiple is infinite.
The greatest 3-digit multiple of 33 is 30. 33 x 30 = 990
There is no 'greatest common multiple' of any two numbers. You can keep multiplying towards infinity and you will never reach a maximum. You may either be thinking of... ...the least common multiple of 3 and 4, which is 12. ...the greatest common denominator of 3 and 4, which is 1.