Multiplicative group of an infinite field is not cyclic

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Question.

Prove that the multiplicative group of any infinite field can never be cyclic .

$\mathbb R$, $\mathbb Q$, $\mathbb C$ are some infinite fields whose multiplicative groups are not cyclic, I know.

I need some lead as to how to begin the proof.

Sorry for the lack of work on my part (I'm clueless) and any help is appreciated.

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Ok here is the characteristic 2 case:

Assume $k$ is an infinite field of characteristic $2$ with a cyclic multiplicative group. Note that any element of an algebraic extension of $\mathbb{F}_2$ has finite multiplicative order, so this implies that every element of $k-\{0,1\}$ must be transcendental.

Next let $x$ be a generator for the multiplicative group, which exists as we are assuming it is cyclic. Consider the element $1+x$ of our field. It is nonzero and therefore equal to some power of $x$ since $x$ is a generator. But then $1+x=x^n$ for some $n$, so $x$ is algebraic over $\mathbb{F}_2$, contradicting the above claim.