Yes, if you add zero to any number, it will always remain itself. The value of zero is, literally, nothing, so nothing would be added to any number.
If you add zero to a number, the number will stay the same.
commutative
the property of which you add 1 and another number and you get the same number at which the other number you added 1 with. Again, I avoid blanking previous answers. Let me just say that I have no idea what it means. For one thing, the additive identity is 0, not 1. The identity law says that you can add 0 to any number without changing its value. In symbols, x+0 equals 0+x equals x
The Addition Property of Equality states that if you add the same number to both sides of an equation the two sides remain equal. Source- My mathbook.
The addition property of equality states that if you add the same number to both sides of an equation, then the sides remain even. This means that the equation remains to be true.
The distributive property of multiplication over addition.
If you add zero to a number, the number will stay the same.
The closure property of addition says that if you add together any two numbers from a set, you will get another number from the same set. If the sum is not a number in the set, then the set is not closed under addition.
zero property of addition
commutative
The addition property says that if you add the same number (or subtract the same number)from both sides of the eqaution you do not change the equation. So to solve and equation you must get the unknown by itself, so you need to use this property, often along with the multiplication property. For example if X -5 = 3 you can use addition property to add 5 to both sides: X - 5 + 5 = 3 + 5 X = 8
The relevant properties are the commutative property, the associative property, and the property of zero (i.e., if you add zero to a number you get the same number again).
0 is the identity under addition.
additive inverse property
10
the property says that a+b+c is the same as a+c+b and it is the commutative property of addition.
Associative? Commutativity?