It doesn't always. It's true only if the 4-digit numbers are mirror images of each other.
There is no 1-digit number that is equal to 14 and 28.
No, a multiple of 6 cannot have a ones digit equal to 3. The ones digit of a multiple of 6 will always be even, either 0, 2, 4, 6, or 8, because 6 is divisible by 2.
No. Four can not be multiplied by another whole number and equal ten.
The factors of 35 are 1, 5, 7, 35. All of them are odd. 7 and 35 are multiples of 7. 5 has a digit sum equal to 5. No number satisfies all of the conditions.
1
There is no 1-digit number that is equal to 14 and 28.
Yes. 12 * 9 = 108. 108 is a number made up from 3 digits.
No, a multiple of 6 cannot have a ones digit equal to 3. The ones digit of a multiple of 6 will always be even, either 0, 2, 4, 6, or 8, because 6 is divisible by 2.
When a number is a multiple of 5, the possible values for the ones digit are zero and five.
No. Four can not be multiplied by another whole number and equal ten.
The factors of 35 are 1, 5, 7, 35. All of them are odd. 7 and 35 are multiples of 7. 5 has a digit sum equal to 5. No number satisfies all of the conditions.
1
24
198 is the greatest three-digit even number that has no factor equal to 4.
As an 8 digit binary number it is equal to 166.
89
No 5 digit number can equal 12 and so there can be no answer to the question.