9, a divisor of 18, is greater than 4, a multiple of 2.
A divisor.
The easiest way is to use the whole number as the numerator over the divisor 1.
Most quotients are NOT whole numbers: only those in which the divisor in the simplest form is 1 are whole numbers.
Sure. It can be, but the quotient isn't a whole number. It's 10 and 2/3. 64 can be a divisor of 64, but it's not a factor of 64.
It is a fraction in which the divisor is a whole number. The dividend (or numerator) can be any number.
No.
1, with 1 as the odd divisor.
9, a divisor of 18, is greater than 4, a multiple of 2.
A whole number is a number is a rational number which, in its simplest form has 1 as divisor. All other numbers are not whole number.
A divisor.
The easiest way is to use the whole number as the numerator over the divisor 1.
Unlike dividing by a whole number, dividing buy a decimal number cannot be done directly - the divisor must first be converted to a whole number (and then the division can be done). The easiest way to do this conversion is to keep multiplying the divisor by 10 until a whole number is obtained; however, whatever is done to the divisor must also be done to the dividend, so by whatever the divisor is multiplied, the dividend must also be multiplied.
Yes, it does.
Most quotients are NOT whole numbers: only those in which the divisor in the simplest form is 1 are whole numbers.
It can be, but if you are looking for a whole-number answer, such as 3, then 6 is the divisor of 18.
a divisor of a number