Infinite. All prime numbers are odd with the exception of 2.
Prime numbers are only divisible by 1 and themselves. That's the rule.
The only Prime number that is even is 2 since all other even numbers are divisible by 2 also. Hence all prime numbers are odd with the exception of 2.
Odd. The only prime number that is even is two. Since there are many prime numbers that are odd (such as 3, 5, etc.), there are more odd prime numbers than even.
odd numbers
All prime numbers are odd, exept of the first prime number 2.
There are infinitely many prime numbers. There is only one even prime number, which is 2, because all other even numbers are divisible by 2 and thus are not prime. So, there are infinitely many odd prime numbers and only one even prime number.
The only prime number that's even is 2 the rest are odd but that doesn't mean ALL odd numbers are prime. Many are but not most.
The question, "the" three odd prime numbers, is wrong. There are much more than three odd prime numbers - in fact, infinitely many. There are infinitely many prime numbers, and all except the number 2 are odd.
There are many, many more odd prime numbers than even prime numbers; there is only 1 even prime number, namely 2, whereas the odd prime numbers are 3, 5, 7, 11, ...
All even numbers except 2 are divisible and thus not prime. There is no such number for odd numbers, and there is in fact just one even prime and infinitely many odd primes.
There are more odd numbers than prime numbers.
Prime numbers.
49 of them. ' 2 ' is the only even prime number.
There is an infinite amount of prime numbers all of which are odd numbers
They are all odd, and they are all prime numbers
All of the prime numbers are odd except for two.
No one can count because numbers go on forever.
Odd numbers end in 1, 3, 5, 7 or 9. Prime numbers have only two factors. 47 is an odd prime number.
There's only one even prime, the rest are odd.