No.
You don't. The distributive property involves at least three numbers.
no because distributive property is for multiple digit numbers.
No. The distributive property applies to two operations (usually multiplication and addition), NOT to numbers.
The distributive property is an attribute of two binary operations, not of individual numbers.
No.
You don't. The distributive property involves at least three numbers.
The distributive property is a characteristic that two mathematical operators may have. Numbers do not have a distributive property.
Individual numbers do not have the distributive property - mathematical operations do.
Numbers do not have a distributive property. The distributive property is an attribute of one arithmetical operation over another. The main example is the distributive property of multiplication over addition.
no because distributive property is for multiple digit numbers.
The distributive property is applicably to the operation of multiplication over either addition or subtraction of numbers. It does not apply to single numbers.
No. The distributive property applies to two operations (usually multiplication and addition), NOT to numbers.
The distributive property is an attribute of two binary operations, not of individual numbers.
A number cannot have the distributive property. The distributive property is a property that one binary operator (for example, multiplication) has over another (addition) for a set of numbers or other mathematical objects (matrices).
There is no such thing. The distributive property involves at least three numbers, and two operations (usually multiplication and addition).
The distributive property states that for any numbers a, b, and c: a(b+c) = ab + ac