There are infinitely many such pairs.
Some examples:
1*140
100*1.4
sqrt(2)*70sqrt(2)
10 and 14 5 and 28 4 and 35 2 and 70
There are infinitely many pairs. The simplest is 1 and 140.
Well honey, 140 multiplied by 12 is 1680. Simple math, not rocket science. Hope that helps, sweetheart.
1 x 280, 2 x 140, 4 x 70, 5 x 56, 7 x 40, 8 x 35, 10 x 28, 14 x 20.
15 and 10 if you multiply them. 140 and 10 if you add them. 160 and 10 if you subtract them. 1500 and 10 if you divide them.
10 and 14 5 and 28 4 and 35 2 and 70
-117
179
4760
There are infinitely many pairs. The simplest is 1 and 140.
155
280
These pairs of numbers, when multiplied, equal 420: (1, 420) (2, 210) (3, 140) (4, 105) (5, 84) (6, 70) (7, 60) (10, 42) (12, 35) (14, 30) (15, 28) (20, 21)
14 times 10
To find four numbers that equal 140, one possible combination is 35, 35, 35, and 35. Another combination could be 50, 40, 30, and 20. You can also use negative numbers, such as 100, 50, -10, and 0. The key is that the sum of the four selected numbers must equal 140.
2 x 2 x 5 x 7 = 140
To find four numbers that multiply to 140, one possible combination is 1, 2, 5, and 14, since (1 \times 2 \times 5 \times 14 = 140). Another combination could be 2, 5, 2, and 7, as (2 \times 5 \times 2 \times 7 = 140). There are various combinations possible, but these are a couple of examples.