No. The whole numbers are {0, 1, 2, 3, ...}. There are none less than 0.
No. 0 and negative integers are whole numbers but they are not counting numbers.
Whole numbers include the number 0 and counting numbers do not.
Whole numbers are the integers; 0 is both.
There are no such whole numbers. The sum of three consecutive whole numbers must be a multiple of 3; as 68 is not a multiple of 3 (68 = 3 × 22 2/3) it cannot be the sum of three whole numbers.
Zero isn't a multiple of anything.
The result of multiplying two whole numbers is called a product. It is a multiple of each of the whole numbers.
A WHOLE NUMBER IS ANY NUMBER FROM 0 TO INFINITY.
It is. Zero is a multiple of all numbers.
the set of whole numbers less than 0
No, the factors are the whole numbers. The product is the multiple.
No.
No. The whole numbers are {0, 1, 2, 3, ...}. There are none less than 0.
No, the multiples of 5 are all of the whole numbers whose "1's" digit is either 0 or 5.
No. 0 and negative integers are whole numbers but they are not counting numbers.
Whole numbers include the number 0 and counting numbers do not.
"a whole number that is a factor of two or more nonzero whole numbers is a ___ of the numbers" The answer is "Common Factor". "a whole number that is a factor of two or more nonzero whole numbers." from Ch. 4 - Factors, Fractions, and Exponents, link provided.