It is the same as adding the opposite.
1 - 1 = 1 + (-1 ) = 0
1 - 5 = 1 + (-5) = -4
Because subtraction is addition and division is multiplication. So, subtraction would fall under the properties of addition and division would come under the properties of multiplication.
Subtraction and addition are not properties of numbers themselves: they are operators that can be defined on sets of numbers.
No.
Inverse and idenity
Not by itself. A mathematical operation has properties in the context of a set over which it is defined. It is possible to have a set over which properties are not valid.Having said that, the set of rational numbers is closed under subtraction, as is the set of real numbers or complex numbers.Multiplication is distributive over subtraction.
division, multiplication, addition and subtraction
Multiplication, division, subtraction, addition
addition and subtraction * * * * * No. The distributive property applies to two operations, for example, to multiplication over addition or subtraction.
The answer stays the same For example: 7-0=0
Subtraction is an operation in mathematics that involves finding the difference between two numbers. The result of a subtraction operation is called the difference. Subtraction is the opposite of addition, and it involves taking away one quantity from another.
The commutative and associative properties do not hold for subtraction and division because these operations are not inherently flexible in the way addition and multiplication are. For instance, in subtraction, changing the order of the numbers changes the result (e.g., (5 - 3 \neq 3 - 5)). Similarly, in division, rearranging the numbers leads to different outcomes (e.g., (6 \div 2 \neq 2 \div 6)). This lack of flexibility in order or grouping makes these properties inapplicable to subtraction and division.
substitution property transitive property subtraction property addition property