The LCM of two numbers will never be less than the GCF.
The LCM of a set of numbers will never be less than the GCF.
The LCM of a set of numbers will never be less than the GCF.
The LCM will never be less than the GCF of a set of numbers.
You need at least two numbers to find a GCF or an LCM and the LCM of those numbers can never be less than the GCF. 12 and 360 have a GCF of 12 and an LCM of 360. So do 60 and 72.
No.The gcf of two numbers is LESS THAN OR EQUAL than their lcm.The gcf of two DIFFERENT numbes is LESS THAN their lcm.
If their GCF is 1, their LCM is their product. If their GCF is greater than 1, their LCM is less than their product.
The pair of numbers whose GCF is 1 and LCM is 36 is 9 and 4. The numbers should be greater than their GCF and less than their LCM.
The LCM will never be less than the GCF.
The GCF and LCM of 10 and 10 is 10. But apart from that special circumstance, the LCM will never be less than the GCF. Apart from a number itself, all of its factors are smaller than it. Apart from a number itself, all of its multiples are larger than it. You can't have a GCF that is greater than the smaller number, and you can't have an LCM that is less than the larger one. Factors go into numbers, numbers go into multiples.
The GCF is 12. The LCM is 360.
The GCF is 4.