No one knows.
There is no largest common multiple of any two numbers: whatever common multiple is claimed to be the largest can be increased to an even larger common multiple by adding the lowest common multiple for the numbers (which for 2 and 3 is 6).
93
It will be the largest multiple of 60
There is no largest common multiple of any set of numbers as whatever value is assumed to be the largest can be increased by adding the lowest common multiple of the numbers to get an even larger common multiple. For 2 and 3 the lowest common multiple is 6. So whatever number is assumed to be the largest common multiple it can always be increased by 6 to get a larger common multiple.
11 x 9 = 99
The largest two-digit multiple of 5 is 95. This is because the multiples of 5 within the two-digit range start from 10 and go up to 95, with each multiple increasing by 5. The next multiple, 100, is a three-digit number, so 95 remains the largest two-digit multiple.
91 because 13*7=91
No, in order for the number to be even, the last number must be a multiple of 2. It doesn't matter what the largest number is as long as the last number is a multiple of two.
That doesn't exist. There is no multiple of 6 so large that you can't add 6 to it.
The largest five-digit multiple of three is 99,999
There isn't a LARGEST Common Multiple. LOWEST is 60...
9984 is the largest 4-digit multiple of 32