84, 96 and 108
No, the GCF of any two numbers can't get greater than the smaller of the two numbers.
A number can't have a factor greater than itself, so the GCF of a pair of numbers can't ever be greater than the smaller number. The GCF of 9 and 18 is 9.
No, it's never greater than the lesser number.
No, a GCF is not always great than one. For example the GCF of 7 and 3 is 1.
Not at all. For example: gcf(101, 102) = 1 gcf(40, 80) = 40
102 and 108
No. Although the greatest common denominator of a pair of numbers is infinite, the size of the numbers doesn't affect the GCF as much as the difference between them. The GCF of 100 and 102 is 2. The GCf of 33 and 66 is 33.
84, 96 and 108
Because there are many examples where that isn't so. The GCF of 36 and 24 is 12. The GCF of 151 and 149 is 1.
No, the GCF of any two numbers can't get greater than the smaller of the two numbers.
Yes. Simple example: pick 2 primes greater than 100 and 2 less than 100. For each pair, GCF = 1
12, (any multiple of 12 less than 100), any multiple of 12 greater than 100) Example: 12, 24, and 108
The LCM will never be less than the GCF of a set of numbers.
12, 24, and 60 :P
A number can't have a factor greater than itself, so the GCF of a pair of numbers can't ever be greater than the smaller number. The GCF of 9 and 18 is 9.
Yes. Any set of consecutive even numbers has a GCF of 2.