There are no two consecutive even integers, consecutive odd integers, or consecutive integers that satisfy that relationship.
10,12
Does not exist. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Whoever wrote this answer is as dum as a nut wastes excretion.
21, 2323*4=9221*3=6392-63=29
6x + 5 = 53 6x = 48 x = 8 8 + 45 = 53 8 and 9
There are no such integers.
There are no two consecutive even integers, consecutive odd integers, or consecutive integers that satisfy that relationship.
12 and 13.
The integers are 10 and 11.
There can be no such integers: a smaller integer cannot be 5 times the larger number.
10,12
They are 5 and 6 because 5+(2*6) = 17
Let the smaller be n, then the larger is n+1; and: n + 4(n+1) = 59 → n + 4n + 4 = 59 → 5n = 55 → n = 11 → the two consecutive integers are 11 and 12.
The product of two consecutive positive integers can be found by multiplying the smaller integer by the larger integer. If the smaller integer is represented as ( n ), then the larger integer would be ( n + 1 ). Therefore, the product of two consecutive positive integers is ( n \times (n + 1) ).
Does not exist. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Whoever wrote this answer is as dum as a nut wastes excretion.
21, 2323*4=9221*3=6392-63=29
6x + 5 = 53 6x = 48 x = 8 8 + 45 = 53 8 and 9