The pair of numbers whose GCF is 1 and LCM is 36 is 9 and 4. The numbers should be greater than their GCF and less than their LCM.
36 and 1 also qualify.
3 and 36 9 and 12
4 & 9
9 and 12
no because the GFC has to be equal to or less than the lowest number
9
3 and 36 9 and 12
4 & 9
3 and 36
You would have to be a pair of numbers. 6 and 36 would work, as would 12 and 18.
There is not a unique answer. (3,36) and (9,12) are two possible solutions.
9 and 12
The pair of numbers whose GCF is 1 and LCM is 36 is 9 and 4. The numbers should be greater than their GCF and less than their LCM.
The LCM is never less than the greatest number in the set. The LCM of 4 and 9 is 36.
35 and 36 are coprime (any pair of consecutive numbers must be). So lcm(35, 36) = 35*36 = 1260.
No. A multiple cannot be less than the number it is compared to. An LCM can never be less than the greatest number in the set.
1 and 36 4 and 9
3 and 36 9 and 12