All i know is how to remember associative property. In associative property you can have the parentheses in between any numbers and it will be the same answer.
removing the parentheses in a math problem
They are the associative property, distributive property and the commutative property.
when you are only adding or multiplying.
Like Associative property
The associative property of math refers to grouping. This property states that you can group numbers (move the parenthesis) anyway and the result will remain the same.
The Associative Property in math is how the numbers are associated; ex. 2*(3*4) is the same as (2*3)*4.
Its quiet simple. All you have to know is that when you use the distributive property in math, it's most likely and equation. So you basically remove the parentheses. AKA(expanding the equation)
Parentheses is when you are doing an equation, and you solve the problem.
Yes, you do that first.
associative property example: (a+b)+c = a+(b+c)
There's the commutative property of addition, which allows you to switch numbers around in an addition problem. 8+9 = 9+8 or a+b+c = c+a+b The associative property of addition allows you to move parentheses about. (a+b)+c = a+(b+c) The identity property of addition shows the following: a+0=a Dx1=D The inverse property of addition shows this: 5 + (-5) = 0