850 and 850. If they have to be different, 850 and 1700.
850 and 850If they need to be different, 850 and 1700
The GCF is 50.
If the two numbers have a Greatest Common Factor of 850, the smallest they can be are the lowest two relatively prime multiples of 850, which are 2 and 3. The numbers would be 1700 and 2550.*If, conversely, the numbers sought have a Least Common Multiple of 850, the numbers are 25 and 34, as the next pair would be 17 and 50.
The GCF is 25.
850 is the GCF of 850 and 1700.
850 and 1700 have a GCF of 850.
You can only have one GCF and you need at least two numbers to find it.Two numbers with a GCF of 850 are 850 and 1700.
850 and 850. If they have to be different, 850 and 1700.
850 and 1700
850 and 1700, among others.
I think "smallest greatest" is my new favorite oxymoron. If the GCF of two numbers is 850, the smallest those two numbers could be is 850 and 850. If they need to be different, the smallest they could be is 850 and 1700.
You need at least two numbers to find a GCF.
850 and 1700
If the GCF of two numbers is 850, both numbers are multiples of 850. Multiples of 850 include 850, 1700, 2250 and so on. The smallest two numbers that have a GCF of 850 are 850 and 1700. But 1700 is divisible by 850. 1700 and 2250 are the next two smallest and are not divisible by each other.
You need at least two numbers to find a GCF. If you're looking for two numbers that have a GCF of 850, they will both be even.
You need at least two numbers to find a GCF.