144
To calculate (6! \times 2! \times 4! \times 3!), we first find the factorials: (6! = 720) (2! = 2) (4! = 24) (3! = 6) Now, multiplying these together: (720 \times 2 \times 24 \times 6 = 207360). Thus, (6! \times 2! \times 4! \times 3! = 207360).
1/4 times 2/3 = (1 times 2)/(4 times 3) = 4/6 = 2/3
4 and 1/2 times 6 is 4 times 6 + 1/2 times 6 = 24 + 3 = 27
No, the expressions 6 times 2 and 4 times 3 are not examples of the commutative property. The commutative property states that the order of the numbers being multiplied does not affect the result, such as 2 times 3 being the same as 3 times 2. In this case, 6 times 2 is not equal to 4 times 3, so it does not demonstrate the commutative property.
The multiples of 6 and 4 = 24 or 3 times 2 = 6 and 2 times 2 = 4 There you go Happy :) !
9
6 / 3 - 4 * 6 = 2 - 4*6 = 2 - 24 = -22
3 / 4 * 6 = 9/2 or 41/2
(-4)*(-6)/(-3) = (-4)*2 = -8
6 multiplied by 2/3 is 4.
(4) divided by (2/3) times (6/11) = (4) times (3/2) times (6/11) = (4 times 3 times 6) / (2 times 11) = 72 / 22 = 3.2727 (repeating)
It's 10. 3 times 2 is 6, 6 plus 4 is 10, and 10 times 1 is 10.