Yes. 1 is the multiplicative identity for numbers.
No. The identity for multiplication is the number 1. If you multiply a number by 1, then the product is the original number. If you multiply a number by zero, the product is zero, so the number has 'lost it's identity'
Bigger than it
The number 1.
yes it is. say the problem is 18,938,489x1= 18,938,489
1. find the product of the first two 2. multiply that product with the third number
Two numbers are factors of a product when they multiply with each other to become the product. For example, if the product number is 10, then our factors can be 2 and 5, or 1 and 10.
The product is even.
No, because a prime number is 1x a number, but it is not a number multiplied itself. The only way you can get 1 as a product is when you multiply 1x1.
When you multiply any number by 1, you get the original number. Example: 2 times 1 is 2. if you see any math problems mltiplied by 1, you can usually skip that part and getthe sae answer.
its means the numbers that you multiply with to get a product has more than numbers to multiply THAT with than just that number and 1.
No, this statement is not true. When you multiply a number by another number less than 1, the product will be smaller than the first number. For example, multiplying 5 by 0.5 gives a product of 2.5, which is smaller than 5.
Smaller. The product of any positive number and a number between 0 and 1 will be smaller than the original number.