There is no simple answer since, depending on the reason, there are different candidates. For example,
48 is the odd one out. If it was following the sequence - it should be 58.
26
The "pairs" in the sequence are doubles of themselves, e.g (1,2) , (5, 10), (13, 26) but for 29 and 48 neither are doubles or halves of each other. However I'm not sure how you know which of 29 or 48 is the odd one out.
48. This is because 1*2=2, 2+3=5, 5*2=10, 10+3=13, 13*2=26, 26+3=29, but 29*2≠48.
The LCM of 13, 26, and 2 is 26 heres some quick work: here are the first 13 multiples of 2: 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 24, 26 here are the first 3 multiples of 13: 13, 26, 39 here are the first 2 multiples of 26: 26, 52
10 over 26
26
13 and 2
The "pairs" in the sequence are doubles of themselves, e.g (1,2) , (5, 10), (13, 26) but for 29 and 48 neither are doubles or halves of each other. However I'm not sure how you know which of 29 or 48 is the odd one out.
From 75 to 100 (inclusive), there are 26 numbers, and 13 of them are odd.The probability of picking an odd number is 13/26 = 50%.
10/26 = 5/13
The lowest common multiple is 26. 13 multiplied by 2 is 26. 2 multiplied by 13 is 26. So the answer is 26
Yes for example 26/2 = 13 which is an odd number
10/26 simplifies to 5/13
No - odd numbers end with one of the digits 1, 3, 5, 7, or 9, which the number 26 does not. 26 is therefore even.
1.5 + 2.6 = 4.1 3/2 = 15/10 13/5 = 26/10 15/10 + 26/10 = 41/10 = 4 and 1/10
10/13 × 26/15 = 4/3 or 11/3
Composite numbers can have either an odd number or an even number of fractions. Factors of 25 are 1, 5, 25 . (odd number of them) Factors of 26 are 1, 2, 13, and 26 . (even number of them)