There is neither a greatest common factor nor common factors of a single number, such as 47, because there cannot be any form of common factor without two or more numbers to compare. Common factors are factors that the numbers being compared have in common. The greatest common factor is the largest factor that all the numbers being compared have in common. Thus, since there are not two or more numbers to compare, there are neither common factors nor a greatest common factor. Examples: The common factors of 47 and 50 are only 1; the greatest common factor is 1. The common factors of 47 and 94 are 1 and 47; the greatest common factor is 47.
Factors of 94: 1 2 47 94 Factors of 48: 1 2 3 4 6 8 12 16 24 48 The GCF of 94 and 48 is 2
The GCF is 2. 94 is only divisible by 2 and 47. All the others are even, so they are all divisible by 2.
The factors of 658 are:1, 2, 7, 14, 47, 94, 329, 658The factors of 770 are:1, 2, 5, 7, 10, 11, 14, 22, 35, 55, 70, 77, 110, 154, 385, 770The common factors are: 1, 2, 7, 14The Greatest Common Factor (GCF) is: 14
Using the "round to even" rule, they are 86 and 94.
The word "GREATEST" is a superlative adjective and that means there can be only one.GCF(86, 94) = 2.
The GCF is 1.
The greatest common multiple of any set of integers is infinite.
The greatest common factor of 46 and 94 is 2.
Greatest Common Factor for 49 and 94 is 1.
The greatest common factor (GCF) is: 2
The greatest common factor is 1. This is because 11 is a prime number and is not a factor of 94 itself.
94 and 77's highest common factor is one.
The GCF is 1.
Same as the greatest common factor of 19 and 18 - where 18 is the remainder of the division of 94 by 19.
2
It is: 2