Yes.
Because every other set of primes has at least one even number between them.
yes
No. Every other pair has at least one even number between them.
Any two consecutive numbers must comprise one odd and one even number, so their product must be even. Any three consecutive numbers must include two consecutive numbers so the result still applies.
Yes, there is exactly one even number between every pair of consecutive odd numbers; I hope that is what the typing-challenged questioner meant.
Yes.
Because every other set of primes has at least one even number between them.
yes
No. Every other pair has at least one even number between them.
3 can't lie between consecutive whole numbers. It lies between 2 and 4, which are consecutive even numbers.
Any two consecutive numbers must comprise one odd and one even number, so their product must be even. Any three consecutive numbers must include two consecutive numbers so the result still applies.
Yes there is there should be!
No, because every other number in the number line is odd so therefore if you have any number of consecutive numbers you will have at least one odd number (if you're talking about consecutive numbers on a number line).
No.The sum of any number of even integers, consecutive or not, MUST be even. 219 is not even.No.The sum of any number of even integers, consecutive or not, MUST be even. 219 is not even.No.The sum of any number of even integers, consecutive or not, MUST be even. 219 is not even.No.The sum of any number of even integers, consecutive or not, MUST be even. 219 is not even.
This is a list of even numbers: 8, 2, 4, 6, ... This is a list of consecutive even numbers: 2, 4, 6, 8, .... The difference between any two consecutive even numbers is: 4-2=2 or 8-6=2 or 6-4=2 or ... The difference between any two consecutive even numbers is 2
2 , between every two odd numbers there is one even number