No. If you have an odd number (for example 5) and an even number (say 2) and you multiply them together, you will get an even number (10). Therefore, just because the product of two numbers are even does not make both the numbers being multiplied together even (although at least one must be).
An even number is any number that has '2' as a factor.When you multiply two numbers, you multiply all the factors of both of them.If '2' was a factor of either number, or of both, then it's a factor of their product,and the product must therefore be an even number.
No such numbers exist; the product of two odd numbers is always odd.
No. The sum as well as product of two even numbers can only be an even number.
This is not always true. If the sum of two numbers is even, then those two numbers are either both even or both odd. For example: 2 + 2 = 4 (even + even = even) 5 + 7 = 12 (odd + odd = even) 3 + 2 = 5 (odd + even = odd)
None. The sum or product of any two even numbers must be even.
At least one of the two numbers has to be even, but both can be even.
Not necessarily, but at least ''one'' of them must be even, unless the two numbers are both the (irrational) square root of the same even number.
No. If you have an odd number (for example 5) and an even number (say 2) and you multiply them together, you will get an even number (10). Therefore, just because the product of two numbers are even does not make both the numbers being multiplied together even (although at least one must be).
The product of any two even numbers is even.
The product of two even numbers is even. The product of two even numbers will be even. If they are both positive numbers, it will be greater than both of them. If one of them ends in 0, the product will end in 0.
No. It only means they weren't both odd (or another way, that at least one of them was even). An example would be 8 x 9 = 72; the product is even, yet one of the numbers was odd.
An even number is any number that has '2' as a factor.When you multiply two numbers, you multiply all the factors of both of them.If '2' was a factor of either number, or of both, then it's a factor of their product,and the product must therefore be an even number.
The product of two odd numbers is always odd.
You must add either two odd numbers or two even numbers.
Any two consecutive numbers must comprise one odd and one even number, so their product must be even. Any three consecutive numbers must include two consecutive numbers so the result still applies.
No such numbers exist; the product of two odd numbers is always odd.