All numbers that cannot be divided exactly by 2 are odd numbers.
Odd numbers can't be divided evenly into groups of two. The number five can be divided into two groups of two and one group of one. Odd numbers always end with a digit of 1, 3, 5, 7, or 9.
About Number 8. The octahedron is one of the five platonic bodies. A polygon with eight sides is an octagon. In computer technology we use a number system on the basis of eight, the octal system. Eight is the first real cubic number, if one disregards 1 cube. It is also the smallest composed of three prime number. Every odd number greater than one, raised to the square, resulting in a multiple of eight with a remainder of one. The Eight is the smallest Leyland number.
About Number 7. Seven is a prime number. It is the lowest natural number that cannot be represented as the sum of the squares of three integers. The corresponding cyclic number is 142857. You can use this feature to calculate the result of the division of natural numbers by 7 without a calculator quickly. A seven-sided shape is a heptagon. One rule for divisibility by 7 leads to a simple algorithm to test the rest loose divisibility of a natural number by 7: Take away the last digit, double it and subtract them from the rest of the digits. If the difference is negative, then you're leaving the minus sign. If the result has more than one digit, so you repeat steps 1 through fourth. Eventually results are 7 or 0, then the number is divisible by 7 and not otherwise.
What Is An Odd Number?
An odd number is an integer which is not a multiple of two. If it is divided by two the result is a fraction. One is the first odd positive number. The next four bigger odd numbers are three, five, seven, and nine. An integer that is not an odd number is an even number.
An even number is defined as a whole number that is a multiple of two. If an even number is divided by two, the result is another whole number. On the other hand, an odd number, when divided by two, will result in a fraction. Since odd and even numbers are defined only in reference to the set of integers (..., -3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3, ...), all negative numbers can also be either odd or even.