numbers
Inverse operations, or reciprocals.
Inverse operations
Two operations that undo each other are called inverse operations. Examples are addition and subtraction, or multiplication and division.
You need to spell out mathematical operations in your question, or they will come out as above, ambiguously. Use plus, minus, times, divided by, and any other operations you want in your equations.
There are an infinity of possible answers: involving addition, sutraction, multiplication, division, powers, roots and a host of other mathematical operations. One of the simplest is 251 + 1
Inverse operations, or reciprocals.
Two mathematical operations. In arithmetical structures it is usually multiplication and addition (or subtraction), but in be other pairs of operators defined over a mathematical Field.
Inverse operations
a geometrical or other regularity that is possessed by a mathematical object and is characterized by the operations that leaves the object in variant:
Two operations that undo each other are called inverse operations. Examples are addition and subtraction, or multiplication and division.
The question cannot be answered sensibly for two main reasons.First, the question mentions "there opposites" but does not specify WHERE the "there" refers to. Second, opposites are defined in the context of some operation. The opposite of 3 with respect to addition is -3 while the opposite with respect to multiplication is 1/3. There are other operations which will give yet more "opposites". There is no way of determining which one you mean.
You need to spell out mathematical operations in your question, or they will come out as above, ambiguously. Use plus, minus, times, divided by, and any other operations you want in your equations.
Parentheses in an equation tell you that you must perform that operation before any other operations, regardless of what operation that may be.
The ALU handles most of the mathematical processes - addition and subtraction (and sometimes multiplication and division) and comparison operations - and, or, not, xor, and a few other things.
An expression can be that, but it can also be a combination of such terms and other mathematical operations. For example, 3a + 27b^2/sin(27c) provided c is not 0.
opposites * up / down * tall / short oxymoron * "jumbo shrimp" * "little giant"
A unitary rate must specifically have a denominator of one. Unitary rates are used in mathematical operations and conversions. Any other ratio can have any number as the denominator.