6 and 36
There is no greatest common multiple: for whatever value you say is the greatest I can always add their lowest common multiple and get an even greater common multiple.There is a greatest common FACTOR and a LOWEST common multiple:gcf(5, 6) = 1lcm(5, 6) = 30
Multiples of 6 are 6, 12, 18, 24, 30, 36... Multiples of 10 are 10, 20, 30, 40... The LCM of 6 and 10 is 30. The greatest common multiple could go into infinity.
The Least Common Multiple (LCM) for 6 7 12 is 84.
There is no greatest common multiple. Ever! If x were the greatest common multiple, then what about 2x? Since x is a multiple of 16 and 24 then so also is 2x, so that 2x is a COMMON multiple. And it would certainly be greater that x. So 2x is a common multiple that is greater than the greatest common multiple. What?!
There is no such thing as the Greatest Common Multiple. For any multiple calculated, you could add the LCM to get a higher number; essentially, the greatest common multiple of any set of numbers is infinite. The least common multiple of 12 and 18 is 36, The greatest comon factor of 12 and 18 is 6.
The GCF is 6.
The Greatest common multiple of 33 and 6 is 3.
12/2 = 6
6 and 36
6 and 36 12 and 18
6 and 12, among others.==================6 and ANY multiple of 6.
THe GCF and the LCM of 12 and 18 are 6 and 36 , respectively.
There is no (Greatest Common Multiple) as this would be infinity.You can have Lowest Common Multiple (18 in this case), orGreatest Common Factor (6 in this case).
The LCM of 12 and 18 divided by their GCF is 36 divided by 6 = 6.
the least common multiple is what the numbers you are using divide into. e.g. 3 and 6 have 12 as the common factor. the greatest common factor is what divides into your numbers. 6 and 9 have 3 as the greatest common factor
There is no greatest common multiple: for whatever value you say is the greatest I can always add their lowest common multiple and get an even greater common multiple.There is a greatest common FACTOR and a LOWEST common multiple:gcf(5, 6) = 1lcm(5, 6) = 30