well 3+6=9 so, 6+3=9 that is one property
2x3=3x2
4x8=8x4
All of the underneath is utter ignorance. Communitive means "of or belonging to a community" and has no algebraic meaning whatsoever.* * * * *The Communitive Property shows that a problem can have the same answer if you re-arrange the numbersCommunitive propertyA+B= B+AIt will not matter in addition how you group your numbers.Example: 5+3 + 6 =146+3+5 = 14In abstract algebra, a binary operation * has the commutative property ifa*b = b*a.For ordinary numbers, addition has the commutative property; for example 2+3 = 3+2.Subtraction does not have the commutative property, because 2 - 3 does not equal 3 - 2.Multiplication of ordinary numbers has the commutative property, as does multiplication of complex numbers.Matrix multiplication does not have the commutative property in general; there are matrices A, B such that A*B does not equal B*A.Also the vector cross product does not have the commutative property, asi x j = k, but j x i = -k.
3+3=6 3+3=6
Commutative law: The order of the operands doesn't change the result. For example, 4 + 3 = 3 + 4. Associative: (1 + 2) + 3 = 1 + (2 + 3) - it doesn't matter which addition you do first. Both laws are valid for addition, and for multiplication (as these are usually defined, with numbers. However, special "multiplications" have been defined that are not associative, or not commutative - for example, the cross product of vectors, or multiplication of matrices are not commutative.
The answer is the commutative property of addition.
Yes. The commutative property of addition (as well as the commutative property of multiplication) applies to all real numbers, and even to complex numbers. As an example (for integers): 5 + (-3) = (-3) + 5
No. It is the identity property of addition. The commutative property of addition states that numbers can be added in any order to get the same result. For example, 3 + 2 = 2 + 3.
1 + 2 = 2 + 1
Commutative property is taking a question and flipping its factors and getting the same answer. Example: 7+(5+9)=21=(5+7)+9=21 Commutative Property of Addition
The commutative property states that the order of addition does not affect the final sum. For example: 1 + 2 = 3 2 + 1 = 3
The commutative property.
46 + 15 = 15 + 46 is an example of the commutative property of addition.
The commutative property of addition says that it does not matter in which order you add the numbers, you will get the same result. For example, 5 + 3 = 8 and 3 + 5 = 8.
The commutative property means that number's positions can be changed, but their answer will stay the same. This property works for addition and multiplication. For example 5+6 = 6+5 or 3x2 = 2x3.
The commutative property states that you can change the order of the arguments of a binary operation without affecting the result. To illustrate: X + Y = Y + X, for commutativity of addition.
5+3= 8 3+5=8 same toda