An integer is a whole number. The two consecutive integers that equal 25 are 12 and 13.
There are no two consecutive integers which sum to make 48. The closest you can get is if you drop the integer part of the problem and state simply that they have to have a difference of 1 between them. In which case it would be 23.5 and 24.5.
The numbers are 62 and 64 are two consecutive integers that equal 126.
Two consecutive integers which multiply together to equal 156 are 12 and 13.
Consecutive integers added or subtracted will turn out to be odd numbers. You can't make 8 with consecutive integers.
An integer is a whole number. The two consecutive integers that equal 25 are 12 and 13.
There are two consecutive even integers that equal -298: -150 and -148.
There are no two consecutive integers which sum to make 48. The closest you can get is if you drop the integer part of the problem and state simply that they have to have a difference of 1 between them. In which case it would be 23.5 and 24.5.
Let x equal the smallest integer. The sum will be 3x + 6
There are no "two consecutive integers" that can do that.But there are two consecutive even integers that can: 8 and 10 .
The numbers are 62 and 64 are two consecutive integers that equal 126.
The integers are 106 and 108.
I think you mean consecutive even integers: 20 & 22
Two consecutive integers which multiply together to equal 156 are 12 and 13.
Consecutive integers added or subtracted will turn out to be odd numbers. You can't make 8 with consecutive integers.
9, 11, 13, 15 The solution equation is A + B = 24 where B = A +2 (the consecutive odd integer) 2A +2 = 24 A = 11, B = 13
The three numbers added together will equal 228. The average of the three numbers will be 228 / 3 = 76. If you take one even integer from either side of 76, you get 74 and 78.Therefore, the three consecutive even integers which equal 228 are 74, 76 and 78.