The one's digit can only be 5 or 0.
0 is a multiple of any number, since n*0 = 0 so 6*0 = 0 and 0 IS a multiple.
It depends for example: 0, 3, 6 This times table starts with 0. 3, 6, 9 This one does to it is just not included in the times table. So yes 0 is a multiple of all numbers.
No, one is not a multiple of 3. A number is considered a multiple of 3 if it can be evenly divided by 3 without leaving a remainder. Since 1 divided by 3 equals 0 with a remainder of 1, it is not a multiple of 3.
Yes. You can multiply 5 by 0 to get 0.However, 0 is a trivial multiple because it is effectively a multiple of any number. In many cases, questions on multiples will use the phrase "nonzero multiple" to make this distinction.
No, it is not a multiple of 0. Only 0 OS a multiple of every integer.
The one's digit can only be 5 or 0.
That depends. If any number multiplied by 0 is equal to 0, then is 0 a multiple of no numbers, or every number... a tricky one.
Why the product of a multiple of ten and a multiple of ten will always have only one zero
5, which is the only prime number which is a multiple of 5!
0 is a multiple of any number, since n*0 = 0 so 6*0 = 0 and 0 IS a multiple.
one
Yes, anything ending with a 5 or 0 is a multiple of five. 1550. Ends in 0
One is a factor of every number. One is only a multiple of itself.
Zero is a multiple of any integer. We generally don't list it, using only the non-trivial multiples.
0*6=0, 0 is a multiple of 6.
That is not necessarily true. A zero at 0 produces a unique answer as often as it does elsewhere, and a multiple multiple answer as often as it does elsewhere.