I am not entirely sure what you mean; a multiple of 10 can have more than one zeros. For example, 20 x 10 = 200.
If zero is counted as a whole number, then the first three whole numbers are zero, one and two and the product of ANY series containing zero is ZERO. If, on the other hand, only non-zero numbers are considered, then the series is one, two and three and the product is six.
It is always FALSE.
Zero is a multiple of any integer. We generally don't list it, using only the non-trivial multiples.
1
Zero divided by anything is always zero.
Why the product of a multiple of ten and a multiple of ten will always have only one zero
The product of zero and any number is always 0.
No, but the only exception is if the rational number is zero.
Yes.
Anytime you multiply a number by zero, the product will always be zero. Thus, whenever a number, regardless of its value, is multiplied by zero, there is only one possible solution: zero.
When you divide zero by anything or multiple anything by zero, the answer will always be zero.
0: The product of 0 and any number, including zero itself. is always zero.
A multiple
If one is zero, then the product is always zero.(Think about it ... you take 279 zero times. How much do you have ?)
The digit with which a multiple of 4 ends depends on the last digit of the other factor. If the last digit is a zero, the product ends with zero; if the last digit is a 1, the product ends with 4; etc. The only options for the last digit of the product are 0, 2, 4, 6, 8.
No. Their product is always greater than 0.
the product will always end in zero