Community property is generally anything that was acquired after marriage in a community property state. This can include the house you bought, cars, furniture, artwork, collectibles and even income that was earned during the marriage.
Separate property on the other hand, is generally anything that was acquired prior to the marriage. Separate property can also include items or money received as an inheritance (even after the marriage).
Community property. real estate or other items that are owned by two people, usually husband and wife. Items that cannot be sold by just one of the people involved.
No idea what the communative property is. The commutative property for addition is that a + b = b + a. Similarly, for multiplication, a*b = b*a
5*4 = 4*5
The property is the same, whether you work with integers, decimals, or fractions.
No, communitive means of, or belonging to, a community. It is the commutative property of the multiplication - not of any particular number.
Who knows - there appears to be no such word as communative! So maybe it is communative and maybe it is not.If, however, you meant commutative which, is a mathematical term, then the answer is no, subtraction is not commutative.
No idea what the communative property is. The commutative property for addition is that a + b = b + a. Similarly, for multiplication, a*b = b*a
communative
It is the commutative property of multiplication.
communative property is when you are adding or subtracting any numbers it doesnt matter how u write them.....
9+4=4+9 OR 9x4=4x9
5*4 = 4*5
Using the communative property of both addition and multiplication, 11+ab could be rewritten as ab+11, 11+ba or ba+11.
The property is the same, whether you work with integers, decimals, or fractions.
No, communitive means of, or belonging to, a community. It is the commutative property of the multiplication - not of any particular number.
Idk do u know dat is y i asked r u a n**********
Who knows - there appears to be no such word as communative! So maybe it is communative and maybe it is not.If, however, you meant commutative which, is a mathematical term, then the answer is no, subtraction is not commutative.
i would say thre will be no difference between the two the only thing is that you have to know what to do with the two