AxB=BxA
(AxB)xC=Ax(BxC)
Ax(B+C)=AxB+AxC
Ax1=A
Ax0=0
The multiplicative and additive identities, possibly.
Multiplicative Identity states that the product of any number and one is the number itself.
They are, respectively, the multiplicative and additive identities for the field of numbers.
Identities. 1 is the multiplicative identity and 0 is the additive identity.
Yes.
No. A "multiplicative" is an adjective, not a noun. For example a multiplicative inverse, or a multiplicative relationship, or multiplicative model. It is not a number and cannot be divided.
The multiplicative identity is a property of a set of numbers, not of an individual number in the set. 1 is the multiplicative identity for the set of all integers, rationals or reals etc. Individual elements of the set do have a multiplicative INVERSE and for 2, this is 1/2 or 0.5
Assuming the question is about the multiplicative inverse, the answer is, -1. It is its own multiplicative inverse.
she was multiplicative
The answer depends on multiplicative WHAT! Multiplicative is an adjective, not a noun.The answer depends on multiplicative WHAT! Multiplicative is an adjective, not a noun.The answer depends on multiplicative WHAT! Multiplicative is an adjective, not a noun.The answer depends on multiplicative WHAT! Multiplicative is an adjective, not a noun.
it sucks balls thats all u have to know
There are no "the" 5 rational numbers. There are infinitely many of them and, while 0 and 1 have special status (as the additive and multiplicative identities), in mathematical terms the rest have the same status and so there are no others which are more important.