No, the factors are the whole numbers. The product is the multiple.
no whole #'s include 0 and counting #'s don't include 0
None. The LCM (least common multiple) is the smallest positive whole number exactly divisible by two or more whole numbers.
For the product to be zero, one of the numbers must be 0. So the question is to find the maximum sum for fifteen consecutive whole numbers, INCLUDING 0. This is clearly achived by the numbers 0 to 14 (inclusive), whose sum is 105.
That depends. If any number multiplied by 0 is equal to 0, then is 0 a multiple of no numbers, or every number... a tricky one.
The result of multiplying two whole numbers is called a product. It is a multiple of each of the whole numbers.
A WHOLE NUMBER IS ANY NUMBER FROM 0 TO INFINITY.
It is. Zero is a multiple of all numbers.
the set of whole numbers less than 0
No, the factors are the whole numbers. The product is the multiple.
No.
No. The whole numbers are {0, 1, 2, 3, ...}. There are none less than 0.
No, the multiples of 5 are all of the whole numbers whose "1's" digit is either 0 or 5.
No. 0 and negative integers are whole numbers but they are not counting numbers.
Whole numbers include the number 0 and counting numbers do not.
"a whole number that is a factor of two or more nonzero whole numbers is a ___ of the numbers" The answer is "Common Factor". "a whole number that is a factor of two or more nonzero whole numbers." from Ch. 4 - Factors, Fractions, and Exponents, link provided.
Just multiply 40 x 0, 40 x 1, 40 x 2, etc.