The answer depends on how far the multiplication table goes. Some people learn them to times 10, others to x12 and some to x15.
24
True I’m to dumb to answer
24
24. (1 x 24) (2 x 12) (3 x 8) (4 x 6) Occurs in seven places on a 12x12 table, six in a 10x10 table.
180 or 288 work If your talking about having 18 factors. Hopefully that's what your talking about.
Any number that isn't on the list of products in an infinitely large multiplication table (excluding the 1s lines) is a prime.
Yes
All numbers in the 2s column on the multiplication table end in the even numbers 2, 4, 6, 8, or 0.
24. (1 x 24) (2 x 12) (3 x 8) (4 x 6) Occurs in seven places on a 12x12 table, six in a 10x10 table.
There is no such number. The maximum number of times that any number appear is 4.
2=6
180 or 288 work If your talking about having 18 factors. Hopefully that's what your talking about.
Any number that isn't on the list of products in an infinitely large multiplication table (excluding the 1s lines) is a prime.
Yes
http://www.mathsisfun.com/multiplication-table-bw.html this is a printable multiplication table. Multiplication doesn't change no matter what grade so just leave the chart as is.
From the number being used for the multiplication. (the two times table, the three times table etc).
All numbers in the 2s column on the multiplication table end in the even numbers 2, 4, 6, 8, or 0.
The group number is an identifier used to describe the column of the standard Periodic Table in which the element appears.
Single digit numbers is not correct. Squares of numbers will appear odd number of times in a multiplication table: 1², 2², 3², 4², 5², 7², etc....
The period number of an element is the row in which it appears.