Multiples of 3: 123, 45, 6, 78, and 90
Multiples of 7: 7, 14, 28, 56, and 903
Primes: 5, 23, 41, 67, and 809
The multiples of any number cannot be prime numbers because such numbers are the product of at least two numbers. Prime numbers, but definition, cannot be cannot be the product of any numbers except itself and one.
All numbers are multiples.
No multiples of the same number greater than one can be co-prime, since they will both have that number as a factor.
There is only one even prime number: 2. All other even numbers are multiples of 2, and thus are not prime.
No. Both are even numbers are are multiples of 2.
No, multiples of prime numbers are composite.
All the numbers from 2 to 19 are multiples of prime numbers.
Multiples of 6 cannot, by definition, be prime numbers!
Multiples aren't prime.
Multiples of 10 cannot be prime.
There prime numbers
no
prime numbers can only be multiples of 1 and itself. perhaps 3 is just the number you want.
Multiples of 6 are even composite numbers.
no, because then they would be divisible by the number you multiplied it by.
3. All other multiples of 3 are not prime.
Multiples of 6.