Please tell us your set of numbers.
-- List all factors of the first number. -- List all factors of the second number. -- If there are more than two numbers, list all factors of each one. -- Find the set of factors that are on every list. -- Find the greatest factor in the set.
The set of factors of 72 contains the set of factors of 36.
List the factors of each of the numbers in the set. Write down the numbers that appear on all the lists. Choose the largest one.
The set of factors includes one and the number itself. Proper factors do not include those two.
citizenship, residence, and age
Individual state may set any qualifications they choose for voting as long as those qualifications are not in conflict with the United States Constitution or Federal Laws. Most qualifications involve timeliness of registering.
reserved to the States
Each house is the judge of elections, returns, and qualifications of members in Congress.
The formal qualifications that most State set out for membership in the legislature are Age, Citizenship, and Residence.
Please tell us your set of numbers.
Voters must be citizens of the United States and live in the precinct in which they vote. States to have the right to declare what the minimum voting age is.
The qualifications for renewable energy credits vary. Each type of renewable energy has its own set of rules, this includes wind, solar and hydro power.
Not exactly. "Qualifications" to vote are set by the states, subject to certain restrictions in the Constitution and its Amendments and the authority of the federal government in enforcing the Fifteenth Amendment's Equal Protection Clause. Federal case law holds that the "right" to vote belongs to only to "qualified" citizens and that the states have the general authority to prescribe those qualifications. That authority has limits based in the Constitution and its Amendments. States may not use certain factors in determining qualification. Factors such as payment of poll taxes, prior condition of servitude (former slaves), sex, age (over 18) may not be used by the states to determine "qualification." States are free to make reasonable rules governing a person's qualification to vote, but they may not use that power as a means of depriving otherwise able citizens of the right to vote. States may require citizenship, registration, residency, a minimum level of competency. States may preclude convicted felons from voting. The Voting Rights Acts of 1965 and 1970 provide other restrictions on the power of states to qualify voters when that power is actually being used to disqualify voters.
The factors of 24 are 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 12 and 24. If the set contains all of these factors, then the set is well defined because all elements are factors of 24, the common property of each element. 24 can be evenly divided by each number in the set and that is why it is well defined.
Equated means set equal to each other, so equated factors means factors that are equal.
Voters must be citizens of the United States and live in the precinct in which they vote. States to have the right to declare what the minimum voting age is.