The LCM for any pair of natural numbers can be as big as their product.
All but the square numbers - 53 of them.
The LCM of two numbers will never be less than the GCF.
Prime squares have three factors. There are 11 of them in that range.
What do you mean, "the" two factors? There are much more than two factors, even if you only consider natural numbers.
set of all even natural numbers less than 10 = {2, 4, 6, 8}
set of all even natural numbers less than 9 Answer = {1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8}
They are 2 4 and 6
The natural numbers are the counting numbers. Therefore, the natural numbers less than 31 are the numbers from 1 to 30.
No, they go on forever - so there is no largest natural number, even or odd.
2, 4
There are 9 natural numbers less than 10.
(2, 4, 6, 8)
In ascending numerical order, the set of even positive integers less than 9 is: 2, 4, 6, 8
The set of natural numbers less than four is {1, 2, 3}.
An infinite number of even numbers are less than 10.
The converse statement for "odd natural numbers less than 8 are prime" would be "prime numbers less than 8 are odd." But honey, just because a number is odd doesn't mean it's automatically prime. Watch out for those sneaky even primes like 2, they'll throw a wrench in your logic party.