No, only every other multiple is odd. Example: 3,6,9,12,15,18
3, 9, and 15. 6 and 18 are also multiples of 3, but are even.
for three 3 6 9 12 for five 5 10 15 20 these both numbers dont share a common denominator in the first 4 multiples
Yes, for example the multiples of 2 are: 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, ......etc. (all even numbers are multiples of 2) or multiples of 3 are 3, 6, 9, 12, 15, 18, 21, ....... etc.
prime numbers can only be multiples of 1 and itself. perhaps 3 is just the number you want.
1, 2 and 3 are the first three numbers . Multiply each of them by 2 and you will have an even multiple.
2, 4, 6 All even numbers have even multiples.
The first 50 multiples of 6 are the first fifty even multiples of 3.
There are 16 numbers from 1 to 101 that are divisible by 3 and are even.
It is not possible it has to be an even number.Plus it has no times or division numbers.
16 of them.
The multiples of all odd numbers are odd and even. Odd x odd = odd. Odd x even = even. Since odd and even numbers alternate, the multiples will alternate as well.
There are 16 multiples of 6 in that range.
They are all even and multiples of 12, which is the lowest common multiple of 3 and 4.
Because not all odd numbers are multiples of 3 - I have shown you below that this is the case and you can see some multiples of 3 are even and some are odd and you can also see that there are even and odd numbers BETWEEN the multiples of 3. 1 (odd) 2 (even) 1*3 =3 (odd) 4 (even) 5 (odd) 2*3 = 6 (even) 7 (odd) 8 (even) 3*3 = 9 (odd) 10 (even) 11 (odd) 4*3 = 12 (even)
They are all te multiples of 6 within that range.
18,36,54