No, 2 is prime.
Not quite true . . . the number '2' is a prime number. All the rest of the even numbers cannot be prime because they always can be divided by 2.
2 is prime
Not always true because 2 times 13 = 26 which is an even number
It is true that the sum of 2 even numbers is never odd
No. None of them are.
That is false. Two is a prime number and two is even.
False because 2 is an even number which is also a prime number.
No. Some prime numbers are far above 60.
Two composite numbers may or may not be relatively prime, depending on their factors. Relatively prime numbers are sets of two or more numbers having 1 as their greatest common factor (gcf). All even numbers have 2 as a common factor, so no even number is relatively prime with any other even number.
As long as one of the numbers isn't 2, adding any two prime numbers results in an even number. Why? 1.) Adding any two odd numbers gives an even number, 2.) adding an odd and an even gives an odd, and 3.) all primes are odd, except for 2.
This is because they are only two factors in that number. It may seem to you that all prime numbers odd, but it is not true. Most of them however, are prime numbers. This is why most of the odd numbers are prime numbers.
Yes, it is true that 2 is the only even prime number. All even numbers are evenly divisible by 2 (that is the definition of an even number). The number 2 is also divisible by 2, however, prime numbers, like all numbers, are evenly divisible by themselves, so that does not disqualify 2 from being a prime number.