6, 12, 18, 24, 36, 72
1 is a factor of 6. factors are those numbers which divide into other numbers without remainders multiples are those numbers which are other numbers multiplied by another number. 1 is a factor of 6 → 6 is a multiple of 1.
24
Any number of the form 12*k, where k is an integer will be a multiple of 4 and 6.
No, but vice versa holds true. Case and point: 6 is a multiple of 2, but not a multiple of 4. 8 is a multiple of 4, and is a multiple of 2. Because a factor of 4 is 2, every multiple of 4 is also a multiple of 2. But since 4 is not a factor of 2, rather, only half of it, only half of the multiples of 2 will be multiples of 4.
4
6 is both a factor and a multiple of 6.
10 is a multiple of 6 and a factor of 60 :)
There is no such number. If a multiple of 4 is a factor of 30, then 4 must also be a factor of 30, but 4 is not a factor of 30 (the factors of 30 are: 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 10, 15, 30), thus no such number exists.
The number 8 is the factor of 18. But 8 is not a multiple of 6.
6, 18, 30, 90
Any multiple of 6 has 6 as a factor.
In mathematics, a factor is a number that divides another number without leaving a remainder. A multiple is a number that can be divided evenly by another number. In this case, 6 is both a factor and a multiple of itself, as it can be divided evenly by 1, 2, 3, and 6.
Factors divide into a number. A number divides into multiples. 3 is a factor of 6. 12 is a multiple of 6. 6 is both a factor and a multiple of 6.
Oh, dude, that's like asking me to find a needle in a haystack... if the haystack was made of numbers. So, a number that's a factor of 30 means it divides evenly into 30, right? And being a multiple of 2 just means it's, like, even. So, the number you're looking for is 2 because it's, like, the cool kid that fits both criteria.
Either or both. 12 is a factor of 24. 12 is a multiple of 6. 12 is both a factor and a multiple of itself.
1, 2, 3, 4, 8