What is commutative
property under division?
Answers
Answer:Commutative property:
Commutative property states that there is no change in result though the numbers in an expression are interchanged. Commutative property holds for addition and multiplication but not for subtraction and division.
ADDITION:
a+b = b+a.
Example:
1+2 = 2+1
3=3,
SUBTRACTION:
a-b ≠ b-a.
Example:
1-2 = 2-1
-1=1, which is not true.
MULTIPLICATION:
a x b = b x a
Example:
2 x 3 = 3 x 2
6 = 6,
DIVISION:
a ÷ b ≠ b ÷ a
Example:
4 ÷ 2 = 2 ÷ 4
2 = ½, which is not true.
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No, community property supports division.
Explanation:
The Commutative property indicates that the order does not matter. Multiplication and addition is commutative.
Division is not a commutative for Whole Numbers, which means that if we change the order of numbers in the division expression, the result will also change. For example: 2 + 3 = 3 + 2 (addition is commutative) but
4 divided by 2 is not equal to 2 divided by 4. (division is not commutative).
To know more:
give some examples of commutative property under division ...
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Show that the commutative property for division of rational numbers ...
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