Math, asked by abhisheks0035, 9 days ago

rational no are not associative for division justify this with the help of example ​

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Answered by sereena6a
2

Answer:

Division of rational numbers is not commutative. If a/b and c/d are two rational numbers,. then a/b ÷ c/d ≠ c/d ÷ a/b. Example : 2/3 ÷ 1/3 = 2/3 x ... Therefore, Commutative property is not true for division. ... Cookies help us deliver our services.The division is not under closure property because division by zero is not defined . We can also say that except '0' all .There is no associative property for division. ... This is true for addition and multiplication, but not subtraction or division. Associative property of addition.The associative property states that the order of grouping does not change the result of the operations. This is true for addition and multiplication, but not subtraction or division. A rational number can be expressed as a ratio ( fraction) with integers in both the top and the .

Answered by lisa8729
1

Answer:

hi sereena did you logged out a new account please tell me

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