157 and 158.
There are no two consecutive even integers, consecutive odd integers, or consecutive integers that satisfy that relationship.
There is no set of two consecutive integers equating to 200.
Two consecutive integers will be 0.5 more and 0.5 less than the quotient of their sum divided by 2. The given sum of the two consecutive integers divided by 2 is -3471.5, so the two consecutive integers are -3472 and -3471.
The sum of consecutive integers will always be odd. Consecutive odd numbers will be even. 299 + 301 = 600
The two consecutive integers that have a sum of 53 are 26 and 27.
No two consecutive integers can add up to 98.No three consecutive integers can add up to 98.But 23, 24, 25, and 26 can.
This is impossible, in mathematical terms. If you take two consecutive integers, then one of the integers must be odd and the other must be even. When you add an odd number to an even number, the result is always an odd number. Here, you said two consecutive integers add up to 26, which is an even number. Therefore, the answer is "No real solutions."
There are no consecutive integers that add or multiply to 224. If you meant some other binary operation, you should specify what you meant.
There are no "two consecutive integers" that can do that.But there are two consecutive even integers that can: 8 and 10 .
The numbers are -21 and -20.
None exist. 100 is an even number and two consecutive integers can only add up to an odd number. This is because only 2 evens can add up to an even number and no two even numbers are consecutive. (or two odds, but no two odd numbers are consecutive either)
The two consecutive integers are 19 and 20.
The two consecutive, even integers are 350 and 352.
There are no two consecutive even integers, consecutive odd integers, or consecutive integers that satisfy that relationship.
"Consecutive" integers are integers that have no other integer between them.
No, it is not. It is the sum of two consecutive integers: 46 and 47.
There is no set of two consecutive integers equating to 200.