The last one because for every functoin pair their is exactly one output value fo the function pair.
Answer:
\huge\purple{ 〇 }〇 \huge\blue{ △ }△ \huge\orange{ ☆ }☆ \huge\pink{ ☂ }☂ \huge\purple{ 〇 }〇 \huge\blue{ △ }△ \huge\orange{ ☆ }☆ \huge\pink{ ☂ }☂ \huge\purple{ 〇 }〇 \huge\blue{ △ }△ \huge\orange{ ☆ }☆ \huge\pink{ ☂ }☂ \huge\purple{ 〇 }〇 \huge\blue{ △ }△ \huge\orange{ ☆ }☆ \huge\pink{ ☂ }☂ \huge\purple{ 〇 }〇 \huge\blue{ △ }△ \huge\orange{ ☆ }☆ \huge\pink{ ☂ }☂ \huge\purple{ 〇 }〇 \huge\blue{ △ }△ \huge\orange{ ☆ }☆ \huge\pink{ ☂ }☂ \huge\purple{ 〇 }〇 \huge\blue{ △ }△ \huge\orange{ ☆ }☆ \huge\pink{ ☂ }☂ \huge\purple{ 〇 }〇 \huge\blue{ △ }△ \huge\orange{ ☆ }☆ \huge\pink{ ☂ }☂
2 and 5. 1 isn't apart of the list because the definition of a prime number is having 1 and itself as a factor. 1 only has the number 1.