2
The third multiple of 28 is 84.
The third multiple of 3 can be calculated by multiplying 3 by 3, which equals 9. In this case, the third multiple of 3 is 9. In general, to find the nth multiple of a number, you would multiply the number by n.
The third multiple of four is 12. To find the multiples of a number, you simply multiply that number by consecutive integers. In this case, the first multiple of four is 4, the second multiple is 8, and the third multiple is 12.
51
2
The third multiple of 28 is 84.
2 multiples of 9, which is 18.
The LCM refers to whole numbers, not fractions.
The third multiple of 3 can be calculated by multiplying 3 by 3, which equals 9. In this case, the third multiple of 3 is 9. In general, to find the nth multiple of a number, you would multiply the number by n.
I do it like this: -- The first multiple of 8 is 8. That's not a multiple of 12. -- The second multiple of 8 is 16. That's not a multiple of 12. -- The third multiple of 8 is 24. That IS a multiple of 12, and it's the first one we ran into. or -- The first multiple of 12 is 12. That's not a multiple of 8. -- The second multiple of 12 is 24. That IS a multiple of 8, and it's the first one we ran into.
If you mean what is the multiple OF three, the answer is 9
The third multiple of 10 is 1000 of course. Actually the third multiple of 10 besides 0 would be 30; 10, 20, and 30 are multiples of 10.
The third multiple of four is 12. To find the multiples of a number, you simply multiply that number by consecutive integers. In this case, the first multiple of four is 4, the second multiple is 8, and the third multiple is 12.
Multiplying by a third is the same as dividing by 3.
51
It is: 15