operators (although, there is no specific percentage operation, only the percent symbol to show the number is a percent)
Addition (+)
Subtraction (-)
Multiplication (*)
Division (/)
Exponent (^)
operators
Arithmetic operators are the symbols used in formulas to calculate values, such as addition (+), subtraction (-), multiplication (*), division (/), and exponentiation (^).
addition, subraction, multiplication, division
multiplicación, división, resta, suma (in that order).
the order of operations is as follows Parentheses exponents Multiplication and division addition and subraction
In BODMAS it stands for: Brackets Of Division Multiplication Addition Subraction It means that in a sum you must always start with the brackets, followed by division/multiplication and finally addition/subtraction.
The precedence rule PEMDAS which is a mnemonic for Parentheses Exponentiation Multiplication Division Addition Subtraction
Sum is addition.
An abacus is an ancient form of the modern day calculator.
Exponentiation first, multiplication and division second, addition and subtraction last unless the order is altered by using parenthesis.
The simple answer is that they are two of the basic algebraic functions (along with exponentiation). Division and subtraction are just the opposites of these so are different. Multiplication and addition are also similar because repeated addition is the same as multiplication (and repeated multiplication is exponentiation). The full answer is part of what is known as Algebraic Fields and shows how these functions relate to each other and to different systems of number. basically he said cuz they both increase the original value while division and subtraction decrease it
They are all numbers and obey the same rules for addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, exponentiation etc.
It depends on what operation is meant by combine. Combine could be addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, modulus, exponentiation, average(s), etc.
Depending on the process you use to combine them, it could be called addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, averaging, exponentiation, etc.