Not unless the number is 5.
No.
No. Although one number is prime, the other number could still have room for the prime to fit in. Example: 11/22 can still be simplified even though 11 is a prime number. It can be divided by 11. The answer will be 1/2. Remember that a prime number can still be divided by itself.
No. Although one number is prime, the other number could still have room for the prime to fit in. Example: 11/22 can still be simplified even though 11 is a prime number. It can be divided by 11. The answer will be 1/2. Remember that a prime number can still be divided by itself.
No, because the definition of a prime number is 'a number that can only be divided by one or itself, and still leave a whole number.' Anything in the eight times table would be divisible by two and four.
The largest known prime number is 17,425,170, although technically, there is no largest possible prime number. To this day, mathematicians are still searching for higher prime numbers.
As the definition of a prime number is 'a number that can only be divided by one or itself, and still leave a whole number.' Anything in the eight times table would be divisible by two and four. 27 can also be divided by both three and nine.
A prime number can only be divided by itself and by 1 and still result in a whole number but 4 can also be divided by 2.
There is no greatest number. Given any number with the digit 3 in the ten thousand place, it is always possible to add a billion (for example). That would still leave the 3 in the ten thousand place but would be a greater number.
17 can't be divided by any positive number and still be a round number.
Yes. Being a prime number has nothing to do with the decimal system.
NO! It would have to have only 2 factors for it to be a prime factor!
It is not a prime number. Every number is a multiple of one. Its reciprocal is still one, anything multiplied or divided by one is still the original number.