YES. The product of any two consecutive numbers is even because their product is always a multiple of 2.
Examples:
2 * 3 = 6
3 * 4 = 12
Yes, the product of any three consecutive numbers is divisible by 6. This is because among any three consecutive integers, at least one of them is even (ensuring divisibility by 2), and at least one of them is divisible by 3. Since 6 is the product of 2 and 3, the product of any three consecutive numbers is therefore divisible by 6.
The product of two even numbers is even. The product of two even numbers will be even. If they are both positive numbers, it will be greater than both of them. If one of them ends in 0, the product will end in 0.
true
Not always true because 2 times 13 = 26 which is an even number
1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11 are six consecutive odd numbers whose sum is 36
Yes, the product of any three consecutive numbers is divisible by 6. This is because among any three consecutive integers, at least one of them is even (ensuring divisibility by 2), and at least one of them is divisible by 3. Since 6 is the product of 2 and 3, the product of any three consecutive numbers is therefore divisible by 6.
The product of two even numbers is even. The product of two even numbers will be even. If they are both positive numbers, it will be greater than both of them. If one of them ends in 0, the product will end in 0.
true
Yes, that is true.
Not always true because 2 times 13 = 26 which is an even number
Yes, because one number must be even and the other must be odd. This is true of addition and multiplication.
Yes.
1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11 are six consecutive odd numbers whose sum is 36
Sometimes true.
sometimes true
This is not always true. If the sum of two numbers is even, then those two numbers are either both even or both odd. For example: 2 + 2 = 4 (even + even = even) 5 + 7 = 12 (odd + odd = even) 3 + 2 = 5 (odd + even = odd)
True. The product of 21 negative numbers will be negative.