Yes, it is commutative. The result will be the same whatever the order of numbers and the operators are.
3 + 4 + 3 + 6 + 4 = 20
Commutative property for addition.
Addition is commutative.
No, the expression does not correctly demonstrate the commutative property. The commutative property states that the order of addition does not affect the sum, meaning (a + b = b + a). In the given expression, the placement of parentheses affects the order of operations, so it is not solely illustrating the commutative property. A correct demonstration would involve rearranging the terms without changing their grouping, such as (4 + 3 + 2) versus (2 + 4 + 3).
Commutative Property of Addition
the commutative property of addition
Commutative property for addition.
Addition is commutative.
Commutative Property of Addition
The commutative property of addition
the commutative property of addition
The commutative property
It is the commutative property of addition.
It's called the commutative property of addition.
Commutative property (Abelian property) of addition.
4 plus 5 is the same as 5 plus 4. 2+3=3+2 i.e. the order in which you add doesn't matter... subtraction is not commutative as 5-3 is not the same as 3-5.
It is the commutative property of addition.
It is not a law. It is the commutative property of numbers over addition.