To use the distributive property to remove the parentheses in the expression ( (y + 5) \cdot 10 ), you multiply each term inside the parentheses by 10. This gives you ( y \cdot 10 + 5 \cdot 10 ), which simplifies to ( 10y + 50 ). Thus, the expression without parentheses is ( 10y + 50 ).
-18
3(5 + 12)
8(3 + 4)
8(3 + 8)
6(5 + 11)
It is: 3n-21+4n+8 = 7n-13 simplified
The expression (42 + 7a) cannot be simplified further using the distributive property, as it is already in its simplest form. The distributive property applies to expressions where you can factor out a common term or distribute a coefficient across terms inside parentheses. In this case, since there are no parentheses or common factors, (42 + 7a) remains unchanged.
To apply the distributive property to the expression 6(x + 3), multiply 6 by each term inside the parentheses. This gives you 6 * x + 6 * 3. Thus, the expression simplifies to 6x + 18.
Yes, the expression 3(2x + 4) uses the distributive property. When applying the distributive property, you multiply each term inside the parentheses by 3, resulting in 6x + 12. However, the expression 5x + 4 does not equal 6x + 12, so they are not equivalent. Therefore, while the first part uses the distributive property, the two expressions are not the same.
9(10+3)
There is no distributive property involved in 20 + 44.
Difficult to tell when you cannot use parentheses. a*(b+c) or a(b+c) = ab + ac This is known as the distributive property of multiplication over addition.
No.
Which property is illustrated in this problem? (associative, distributive, identity, or commutative) 7d + 3 = 3 + 7d
distributive
9
90