10 and 14
5 and 28
4 and 35
2 and 70
There are infinitely many pairs. The simplest is 1 and 140.
There are infinitely many such pairs. Some examples: 1*140 100*1.4 sqrt(2)*70sqrt(2)
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.
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179
4760
There are infinitely many pairs. The simplest is 1 and 140.
There are infinitely many such pairs. Some examples: 1*140 100*1.4 sqrt(2)*70sqrt(2)
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
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.
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