It's the Identity Property of Zero.
One interesting property is that zero, multiplied by any number, is zero.One interesting property is that zero, multiplied by any number, is zero.One interesting property is that zero, multiplied by any number, is zero.One interesting property is that zero, multiplied by any number, is zero.
The special property that zero has is that if you multiply zero by any number, you get zero.
math error is incorrect for this question because it is applied when you divide a number by zero which doesn't have a property because it is an error. it is the multiplication property of zero. The multiplication property of zero states that any number multiplied by zero is always zero.
The identity property for addition tells us that zero added to any number is the number itself. Zero is called the "additive identity."
zero + zero = zero
Additive Identity Property.
One interesting property is that zero, multiplied by any number, is zero.One interesting property is that zero, multiplied by any number, is zero.One interesting property is that zero, multiplied by any number, is zero.One interesting property is that zero, multiplied by any number, is zero.
The special property that zero has is that if you multiply zero by any number, you get zero.
math error is incorrect for this question because it is applied when you divide a number by zero which doesn't have a property because it is an error. it is the multiplication property of zero. The multiplication property of zero states that any number multiplied by zero is always zero.
The identity property for addition tells us that zero added to any number is the number itself. Zero is called the "additive identity."
zero + zero = zero
This is the Identity Property so it is the the Additive Identity and Multiplicative Identity.
any number (n) added to zero equals that same number (n). n + 0 = n
If zero is added to a whole number the answer would be the whole number because zero is the same as nothing
Yes, if you add zero to any number, it will always remain itself. The value of zero is, literally, nothing, so nothing would be added to any number.
Any number plus zero is that number.
The additive property states that any number added to zero will equal it's original number.A + 0 = A6 + 0 = 6