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.
9+0=9?
If one is zero, then the product is always zero.(Think about it ... you take 279 zero times. How much do you have ?)
If the numerator is 0 then, provided the denominator is not 0, the answer is always 0.
Zero and 15.
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.
Yes. If a x b = 0 then either a = 0, b = 0, or a = b = 0.
9+0=9?
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
As a general principle, you can find the LCM of two numbers by dividing their product by their GCF. This one won't work. The product of any two numbers with 5 as a common factor would have to end in 5 or 0.
If one is zero, then the product is always zero.(Think about it ... you take 279 zero times. How much do you have ?)
You can compare them by looking at them (they are the same)subtracting one from the other (answer = 0)dividing one by the other (the quotient is 1).
None. If the two numbers have a quotient of 9 then one of them must be 9 times as large as the other. In that case, their difference cannot be 0.
The product of the ten one-digit numbers is 0.
If the numerator is 0 then, provided the denominator is not 0, the answer is always 0.
137 and 0
-5 and +5.