No. Factor pairs can be combined to create multiples.
The answer is the product.
Yes.
No.
Let's deny the premise. I don't think they are opposites. The opposite of a factor is a non-factor or a number that is not a factor and in special cases factors and multiples are the same. 10 is both a factor and a multiple of 10.
The difference is between factor pairs and distinct factors. With square numbers, one of the factor pairs will be the same number twice. When listing the distinct factors, that number is only listed once.
All numbers can be broken down into factor pairs. No matter how many pairs there are, it's an even number of factors. Squares have a factor pair that consists of the same number twice. When you list them, you list the number once.
The only number that is both a multiple of a number and a factor of that same number is the number itself. Multiples of a number are equal to or bigger than the number, while factors are equal to or smaller than the number.
its a factor with two pairs of the same number
All pairs have the same same number of multiples: [countably] infinitely many.
No.
The difference is between factor pairs and distinct factors. With square numbers, one of the factor pairs will be the same number twice. When listing the distinct factors, that number is only listed once.
Let's deny the premise. I don't think they are opposites. The opposite of a factor is a non-factor or a number that is not a factor and in special cases factors and multiples are the same. 10 is both a factor and a multiple of 10.
24 is a factor and a multiple of itself.
what two numbers between 50 and 60 are both multiples of the same number. what factor do they have in common?
No.
Since one dollar is one hundred pennies, the multiplication sentences for 100 would be the same in both cases.
All numbers can be broken down into factor pairs. No matter how many pairs there are, it's an even number of factors. Squares have a factor pair that consists of the same number twice. When you list them, you list the number once.
No multiples of the same number greater than one can be co-prime, since they will both have that number as a factor.
No number has the exact same multiples. Factors and multiples of 12 will have some of the same multiples.