The commutative property of multiplication says that numbers can be multiplied in any order and the result will still be the same. An example would be 7 x 6 and 6 x 7 both equaling 42.
3 * 9 = 27 = 9 * 3
It is not possible to answer the question that was asked because there is no such thing as a communitive property. In mathematics, the commutative property, in simple terms, states that the order in which elements appear does not matter. Thus, an example for addition: 2+5 = 5+2 (= 7) or for multiplication, 2*5 = 5*2 (=10)
I assume you mean "commutative". That means you can change the two numbers around, for example, 5 x 7 = 7 x 5.
yes it does work for subtraction
The commutative property of addition states that a number plus another number equals the same number plus the same number in reverse order. An example of this is 2+5=5+3.
Communitive means of, or belonging to, a community. Multiplication has no particular communitive property.
3 * 9 = 27 = 9 * 3
It is not possible to answer the question that was asked because there is no such thing as a communitive property. In mathematics, the commutative property, in simple terms, states that the order in which elements appear does not matter. Thus, an example for addition: 2+5 = 5+2 (= 7) or for multiplication, 2*5 = 5*2 (=10)
This is an example of the commutative property of multiplication
Your mom! hahaha jk, its the communitive property
I assume you mean "commutative". That means you can change the two numbers around, for example, 5 x 7 = 7 x 5.
35
communitive
yes it does work for subtraction
the mathematical properties are the distributive property,the associative property,the communitive oroperty,and the identity property
communitive
Division Property of Equality