They are: 24, 48, 72 and 96
The first two common multiples of the pair of numbers 4 and 6 are: 12, 24.
14, 28 and 42
24, 48, 72.
This will be difficult to answer accurately without knowing each set of numbers.
24, 48 and 72
there is an infinite amount of common multiples. you can take each of these numbers out to infinite and you will have an infinite amount of multiples also. the lowest common multiple however is 72
Each common multiple of 9 and 10 occurs exactly once (in the list of common multiples), so there is no common multiple that occurs the most. All common multiples of 9 and 10 are the multiples of their least common multiple which is 90.
They are: 18, 36 and 54
a quanity into which each of two or more quanities
To find the common multiples, we first need to break the numbers down into their prime factors: 14 = 2x7 28 = 2x2x7 The next step is to identify any common factors. In this case, both numbers have a single 2 and a single 7, so we can discard one of each. This leaves us with 2, 2 and 7. Multiply these together for the LCM: 2x2x7 = 28 To find other multiples, you now simply multiply this number by any integer. For instance, 28x2, 28x3, 28x4.... Thus the first few common multiples of 14 and 28 are 28, 56, 84, 112.
There are infinitely many common multiples of 3, 5 and 7, each one 105 larger than the previous one. Or to put it another way: the common multiples of 3, 5 and 7 are the multiples of their lowest common multiple which is 105. ie their common multiples are all the multiples of 105, of which there is no end - there is an infinite number of multiples of 105 (or any other number [except zero]).
you list all the multiples of each number until you come to the first number that is in all columns