I would just call them "multiplication" and "division". Both are examples of arithmetic operations.
Division by a non-zero rational number is equivalent to multiplication by its reciprocal.
The answer to a division sentence is the quotient. Sum is addition. Difference is subtraction. Product is multiplication.
It is a division word. The quotient is the result you get when you divide a number (dividend) by another number (divisor).
They are not the same: they are similar. Division is the inverse operation. Division by x (where x is non-zero) is the same as multiplication by (1/x). So the operations are related but that does not make them the same.
The inverse of multiplication is division. * * * * * The inverse of the operation of multiplication is division, as stated in the above answer, but another name for the multiplicative inverse is a reciprocal.
I would just call them "multiplication" and "division". Both are examples of arithmetic operations.
Division by a non-zero rational number is equivalent to multiplication by its reciprocal.
The inverse of division is multiplication
Multiplication is the inverse operation to division.
Division is the inverse operation to multiplication. Division by a number (other than zero) is the same as multiplication by its reciprocal.
"Parentheses, Exponents, Multiplication and Division, and Addition and Subtraction." Therefore multiplication and division are equal.
The answer to a division sentence is the quotient. Sum is addition. Difference is subtraction. Product is multiplication.
multiplication
Division is the inverse operation to multiplication.
It is a division word. The quotient is the result you get when you divide a number (dividend) by another number (divisor).
They are not the same: they are similar. Division is the inverse operation. Division by x (where x is non-zero) is the same as multiplication by (1/x). So the operations are related but that does not make them the same.