When you multiply any number by 1, you get the original number. Example: 2 times 1 is 2. if you see any math problems mltiplied by 1, you can usually skip that part and getthe sae answer.
Smaller. The product of any positive number and a number between 0 and 1 will be smaller than the original number.
No. If you multiply any prime number (such as 2, 3, 5, 7, or 11) by 1, you will get a prime number.
The number 1.
Two numbers are factors of a product when they multiply with each other to become the product. For example, if the product number is 10, then our factors can be 2 and 5, or 1 and 10.
When you multiply any number by 1, you get the original number. Example: 2 times 1 is 2. if you see any math problems mltiplied by 1, you can usually skip that part and getthe sae answer.
No. The identity for multiplication is the number 1. If you multiply a number by 1, then the product is the original number. If you multiply a number by zero, the product is zero, so the number has 'lost it's identity'
Smaller. The product of any positive number and a number between 0 and 1 will be smaller than the original number.
No. If you multiply any prime number (such as 2, 3, 5, 7, or 11) by 1, you will get a prime number.
Yes. 1 is the multiplicative identity for numbers.
Bigger than it
The number 1.
1. find the product of the first two 2. multiply that product with the third number
Two numbers are factors of a product when they multiply with each other to become the product. For example, if the product number is 10, then our factors can be 2 and 5, or 1 and 10.
The product of any number x and 1 is always x.
No, because a prime number is 1x a number, but it is not a number multiplied itself. The only way you can get 1 as a product is when you multiply 1x1.
If you mean the product, that's by definition. A composite number has smaller factors. If you multiply two positive integers, none of which is 1, together, then it follows that the product has smaller factors - namely, the numbers you multiplied together.