the answer is 1 !
Assuming you mean 4 consecutive whole numbers, the answer is number that can be expressed as 4n+10 where n is an integer.
There are no consecutive whole numbers that make 5.25 using simple arithmetical operations.
34, 45 etc.
No, because every other number in the number line is odd so therefore if you have any number of consecutive numbers you will have at least one odd number (if you're talking about consecutive numbers on a number line).
Consecutive prime numbers are two prime numbers that are next to each other, with no other prime numbers in between. For example, 3 and 5 are consecutive prime numbers.
There are no four consecutive whole numbers that add up to 35. The sum of two consecutive [whole] numbers is an even number plus an odd number which is an odd number. The sum of two consecutive numbers and the two next consecutive numbers is the sum of two odd numbers which is even, but 35 is odd, so no four consecutive whole numbers cannot add up to 35.
numbers with patterns; consecutive numbers: 1,2,3,4... consecutive even numbers: 2,4,6,8... and many more Consecutive numbers are numbers that come one after another. For example 5, 6, 7 or 99 and 100.
Adding consecutive pairs of numbers will always turn out to be an odd number. It would have to be consecutive odd numbers: 45 and 47.
There are no two consecutive numbers that equal 70 because the sum of any two consecutive numbers is an odd number.
No numbers (consecutive or not) can lie between a single number.
Consecutive numbers will always total an odd number. Consecutive odd numbers or consecutive primes would be 5 and 7.
No two consecutive whole numbers equal 0.5625 using the basic operations of arithmetic.