Math, asked by sputtappa78182, 5 months ago

multiplicative inverse of c/d??..for 8th class​

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Answered by sureshgowda24244
3

Answer:

In mathematics, a multiplicative inverse or reciprocal for a number x, denoted by 1/x or x−1,[1] is a number which, when multiplied by x, yields the multiplicative identity, 1.[2] The multiplicative inverse of a fraction a/b is b/a. For the multiplicative inverse of a real number, divide 1 by the number.[3] For example, the reciprocal of 5 is one fifth (1/5 or 0.2), and the reciprocal of 0.25 is 1 divided by 0.25, or 4. The reciprocal function, the function f(x) that maps x to 1/x, is one of the simplest examples of a function which is its own inverse (an involution).Multiplying a number is the same as dividing its reciprocal and vice versa. For example, multiplication by 4/5 (or 0.8) will give the same result as division by 5/4 (or 1.25). Therefore, multiplication by a number followed by multiplication of its reciprocal will yield the original number (since their product is 1).

The term reciprocal was in common use at least as far back as the third edition of Encyclopædia Britannica (1797), to describe two numbers whose product is 1; geometrical quantities in inverse proportion are described as reciprocall, in a 1570 translation of Euclid's Elements.[4]

In the phrase multiplicative inverse, the qualifier multiplicative is often omitted, and then tacitly understood (in contrast to the additive inverse). Multiplicative inverses can be defined over many mathematical domains as well as numbers. In which case, it can happen that ab ≠ ba; then "inverse" typically implies that an element is both a left and right inverse.

The notation f −1 is sometimes also used for the inverse function of the function f, which is not in general equal to the multiplicative inverse. For example, the multiplicative inverse 1/(sin x) = (sin x)−1 is the cosecant of x, and not the inverse sine of x denoted by sin−1 x or arcsin x.[5] Only for linear maps are they strongly related (see the discussion on matrices in § Examples and counterexamples below). The terminology difference reciprocal versus inverse is not sufficient to make this distinction, since many authors prefer the opposite naming convention, probably for historical reasons (in French, for example, the inverse function is preferably called bijection réciproque).

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Answered by sakshyamkumarnaik34
0

Answer:

d/c. .What is the multiplicative inverse of c/d

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