Math, asked by Abet7687, 9 months ago

Multiplicative identity is

Answers

Answered by harshu499
3

Answer:

The multiplicative identity property states that any time you multiply a number by 1, the result, or product, is that original number.

To write out this property using variables, we can say that n * 1 = n. It doesn't matter if n equals one, one million or 3.566879. The property always hold true. Therefore:

2 * 1 = 2

56 * 1 = 56

100,000,000,000 * 1 = 100,000,000,000

57,687.758943768579875986754890 * 1 = 57,687.758943768579875986754890

Step-by-step explanation:

It's a way of adding a list of numbers together quickly. For example, if we're solving the multiplication problem 2 * 6, we're really adding 2 to itself six times. In other words, we can rewrite that multiplication sentence as a long addition problem: 2 + 2 + 2 + 2 + 2 + 2. It would take a lot of paper to write really long addition problems that way, so multiplication gives us a shorter way of doing it.

Answered by harshrj659
2

Answer:1 is the multplicatiye identity.

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