If by "opposite" you mean "additive inverse", then yes.
No, it is only true of "opposite" refers to additive inverses. "Opposite" can also refer to reciprocals and then the statement will rarely be true.
it is 20
If all three numbers are positive then the product obviously has to be positive. If TWO of the three numbers are negative, then the product is also positive. But if exactly ONE of the three numbers is negative or if all THREE are negative, then the product must be negative. In general, a product of numbers is negative if an ODD NUMBER of the terms is negative.
No, because 28 can only be calculated as a product in the following ways: 1 x 28 2 x 14 4 x 7 In the above cases, 28, 14 and 4 are all non-prime numbers, which means that 28 cannot be a product of 2 prime numbers alone.
The product of 50 itself does not really exist, but could be said to be 50. The definition of a product is the answer you get when two numbers are multiplied together. For example the product of 13 and 5 is 65.50 is the product of the following whole numbers:1 & 502 & 255 & 102, 5 & 5It is also the product of non-integer numbers, examples of which include, but are not limited to:0.5 & 1002.5, 4 & 52.5, 2, 2 & 52.5 & 20
The product is 96. The two whole numbers can be any of the following pairs: 1, 96 2, 48 3, 32 4, 24 6, 16 8, 12
sometimes true
If two numbers are reciprocals, then their product is 1. If the product of two numbers is 1, then they are reciprocals.
yes. An opposite number is the negative of a positive number, for example -5 and +5 are opposite numbers. Since minus x plus is minus and plus x minus is minus and plus x plus is plus and minus x minus is plus then the product of opposites is the same.
the product of two integers is odd if and only if the two factors are odd
it is 20
Very astute. The LCM and the GCF have an inverse relationship. Since their product equals the product of the original two numbers, the larger the GCF gets, the smaller the LCM is and vice versa.
That is false. This type of statement is only true for prime numbers, not for compound numbers such as 6. Counterexample: 2 x 3 = 6
If all three numbers are positive then the product obviously has to be positive. If TWO of the three numbers are negative, then the product is also positive. But if exactly ONE of the three numbers is negative or if all THREE are negative, then the product must be negative. In general, a product of numbers is negative if an ODD NUMBER of the terms is negative.
No, because 28 can only be calculated as a product in the following ways: 1 x 28 2 x 14 4 x 7 In the above cases, 28, 14 and 4 are all non-prime numbers, which means that 28 cannot be a product of 2 prime numbers alone.
Either of the following pairs: (-36, -3) or (36, 3)
The product of 50 itself does not really exist, but could be said to be 50. The definition of a product is the answer you get when two numbers are multiplied together. For example the product of 13 and 5 is 65.50 is the product of the following whole numbers:1 & 502 & 255 & 102, 5 & 5It is also the product of non-integer numbers, examples of which include, but are not limited to:0.5 & 1002.5, 4 & 52.5, 2, 2 & 52.5 & 20
The following rules apply to all real numbers.if either number is zero, then the product is zero.if the signs of two numbers are the same, their product is positive; if the signs are different then the product is negative.for the product of three or more numbers, the associative property can be used to find the product two-at-a-time.