The product will be greater than 1, when each of the two factors are greater than 1.
The least common factor for two numbers is always one. The least common multiple for two numbers which have no common factors greater than one is their product.
The LCM of two numbers is sometimes the product of the two numbers.
The GCF of two consecutive numbers is always 1. The GCF of any set of numbers can't be greater than the smallest of the differences between the numbers.
Not always. The product of two numbers will always be a common multiple, but it will not always be least. The product of 4 and 9 is 36. The LCM of 4 and 9 is 36. The product of 4 and 8 is 32. The LCM of 4 and 8 is 16.
The product of all those numbers will always be a negative number.
No, the product of two positive numbers is not always greater than either number. For example, if you take two positive numbers, such as 0.5 and 0.5, their product is 0.25, which is less than both numbers. However, if both numbers are greater than 1, their product will indeed be greater than either number.
Not always.
no
Not always, but most of the time.
No. If one of the numbers is 0 it is less; if one of the numbers is 1 it is the same as one of them; otherwise the product is greater than either
Yes, always.
No. Their product is always greater than 0.
Whenever you multiply two negative real numbers.
The assertion in the question is simply not true.
Yes, yes it is. Because a mixed number must have a whole number in it. Therefore, being multiplied only makes it bigger.
Yes, if both the numbers have the same sign. But not if only one of them is negative.
No. A mixed number must be greater than 1, and two numbers that are greater than one that are multiplied together end up being greater that either number by itself.