There is no property which allows you to do that in all cases. It is only possible in the case of the associative property for addition and multiplication. It does not work for subtraction or division.
There is no property which allows you to do that in all cases. It is only possible in the case of the associative property for addition and multiplication. It does not work for subtraction or division.
It means that if you change the grouping (parentheses) of a multiplication problem, you will still get the same answer. Ex. (3 x 2) x 4 = 24 and 3 x (2 x 4) = 24. You changed the location of the parentheses, but the product always remains 12.
Yes.
Distributive PropertyThe Distributive Property is easy to remember, if you recall that "multiplication distributes over addition". Formally, they write this property as "a(b + c) = ab + ac". In numbers, this means, that 2(3 + 4) = 2×3 + 2×4. Any time they refer in a problem to using the Distributive Property, they want you to take something through the parentheses (or factor something out); any time a computation depends on multiplying through a parentheses (or factoring something out), they want you to say that the computation used the Distributive Property.Why is the following true? 2(x + y) = 2x + 2ySince they distributed through the parentheses, this is true by the Distributive Property.Use the Distributive Property to rearrange: 4x - 8The Distributive Property either takes something through a parentheses or else factors something out. Since there aren't any parentheses to go into, you must need to factor out of. Then the answer is "By the Distributive Property, 4x - 8 = 4(x - 2)""But wait!" you say. "The Distributive Property says multiplication distributes over addition, not subtraction! What gives?" You make a good point. This is one of those times when it's best to be flexible. You can either view the contents of the parentheses as the subtraction of a positive number ("x - 2") or else as the addition of a negative number ("x + (-2)"). In the latter case, it's easy to see that the Distributive Property applies, because you're still adding; you're just adding a negative.The other two properties come in two versions each: one for addition and the other for multiplication. (Note that the Distributive Property refers to both addition and multiplication, too, but to both within just one rule.)
Yes...
any addition problem. 3+2+4+5=14. the order property means that the numbers can be in any order and still get the same answer. 2+3+4+5 still is 14. so is 5+4+3+2.
That is non-commutativity. Matrix multiplication is non-commutative although addition still is.
The Distributive Property is easy to remember, if you recall that "multiplication distributes over addition". Formally, they write this property as "a(b + c) = ab + ac". In numbers, this means, that 2(3 + 4) = 2×3 + 2×4. Any time they refer in a problem to using the Distributive Property, they want you to take something through the parentheses (or factor something out); any time a computation depends on multiplying through a parentheses (or factoring something out), they want you to say that the computation used the Distributive Property."But wait!" you say. "The Distributive Property says multiplication distributes over addition, not subtraction! What gives?" You make a good point. This is one of those times when it's best to be flexible. You can either view the contents of the parentheses as the subtraction of a positive number ("x - 2") or else as the addition of a negative number ("x + (-2)"). In the latter case, it's easy to see that the Distributive Property applies, because you're still adding; you're just adding a negative.The other two properties come in two versions each: one for addition and the other for multiplication. (Note that the Distributive Property refers to both addition and multiplication, too, but to both within just one rule.)
Yes. The claim payment was compensation for a covered loss that occurred while you were still the owner. So there is no problem with you cashing the check.
Put a comma between them. Better still, put them in brackets (parentheses) before that.
A gift you receive becomes your property. When you die, if you still own that property it becomes part of your estate.A gift you receive becomes your property. When you die, if you still own that property it becomes part of your estate.A gift you receive becomes your property. When you die, if you still own that property it becomes part of your estate.A gift you receive becomes your property. When you die, if you still own that property it becomes part of your estate.
It is not a problem, but the mortgage will still have to be paid by the surviving co-owner even if that co-owner did not borrow or get any of the money from the mortgage, because it is a lien on the house.