One possible option is : "n, (n+1) where n is an integer".
Consecutive odd and even integers are both 2 apart. That is the reason we use the same denotation to represent them in an equation. x and x+2
"Consecutive" integers are integers that have no other integer between them.
There are no "two consecutive integers" that can do that.But there are two consecutive even integers that can: 8 and 10 .
14*16 = 224
consecutive integers
The two consecutive integers are 19 and 20.
There is no set of three consecutive integers for 187.
They are consecutive odd integers: 25 and 27.
There is no set of six consecutive integers for -4.
There is no set of three consecutive integers for 106.
The two consecutive, even integers are 350 and 352.
There are no two consecutive even integers, consecutive odd integers, or consecutive integers that satisfy that relationship.