No, the only way the GCF and LCM of two numbers can be the same is if the numbers are the same.
Only if the numbers you're comparing are the same. The GCF and LCM of 10 and 10 is 10.
Yes, they can. It should be noted that for such pairs of numbers, the LCM and GCF will always be the same, and always will be the lowest of the numbers. 6 and 12 are a good example; both have a GCF of 6 and a LCM of 6. not true. 2 numbers can't have the same gcf and lcm.
Yes, but only if they are the same number.
The GCF is 68, the LCM is 68
Only if they're the same number. The LCM and GCF of 10 and 10 is 10.
Only if they're the same number. The LCM and GCF of 10 and 10 is 10.
When you are comparing a number to itself. The GCF and LCM of 10 and 10 is 10.
No, the only way the GCF and LCM of two numbers can be the same is if the numbers are the same.
No, the only way the GCF and LCM of two numbers can be the same is if the numbers are the same.
The product of the GCF and the LCM is the same as the product of the original two numbers. Divide the product of the original numbers by the GCF. The result will be the LCM.
No because their gcf is 8 and their LCM is 48
Yes, if you're comparing a number to itself. The GCF and LCM of 10 and 10 is 10.
Only if you're comparing the number to itself. The LCM and GCF of 10 and 10 is 10.
They can be, but only if you're comparing the number to itself. The GCF and LCM of 10 and 10 is 10.
Only if you're comparing a number to itself. The GCF and LCM of 10 and 10 is 10.
GCD and GCF are the same thing. Factors and divisors are interchangeable. The LCD and the LCM are the same process with different results. The LCD produces a denominator, the LCM produces a whole number.