Who knows - there appears to be no such word as communative! So maybe it is communative and maybe it is not.If, however, you meant commutative which, is a mathematical term, then the answer is no, subtraction is not commutative.
Associative works for addition and multiplication. Commutative works for addition and multiplication Distributive works for addition, multiplication and subtraction as well as some combinations of them, but not for division. Nothing works for division.
No idea what the communative property is. The commutative property for addition is that a + b = b + a. Similarly, for multiplication, a*b = b*a
5*4 = 4*5
who invented subtraction?
Who knows - there appears to be no such word as communative! So maybe it is communative and maybe it is not.If, however, you meant commutative which, is a mathematical term, then the answer is no, subtraction is not commutative.
I'm pretty sure it is the communative property.
Associative works for addition and multiplication. Commutative works for addition and multiplication Distributive works for addition, multiplication and subtraction as well as some combinations of them, but not for division. Nothing works for division.
Communitive means of, or belonging to, a community. It has no meaning in math. Communative does not mean anything - in math or elsewhere.
Communicative refers to being able to switch around numbers in a sum and for the sum to be the same. For example, while 2 + 1 = 3 and 1 + 2 = 3, the answers to 2 - 1 and 1 - 2 are not the same.
No idea what the communative property is. The commutative property for addition is that a + b = b + a. Similarly, for multiplication, a*b = b*a
scrolls were either communative, or decorative.
communative
9+4=4+9 OR 9x4=4x9
5*4 = 4*5
Using the communative property of both addition and multiplication, 11+ab could be rewritten as ab+11, 11+ba or ba+11.
It is the commutative property of multiplication.