The result of multiplying numbers is called the product.
Yes. This is called the distributive property. For example: a(1 + 2 + 3 + ... + n) = 1a + 2a + 3a ... + na
it is the same as multiplying by 0.4
Squaring for multiplying, and if you are dividing by the same number, you get 1
The numbers you get from multiplying by a number is called a product.I believe it's like this: factor x factor = productFor example 5x5=25. The two 5's are factors and the 25 is the product.
The answer is called the product.
A scale factor.
When one number (the multiplicand) is multiplied by another number (the multiplier) the resulting number is called the product.
The process of multiplying a number outside a set of parentheses to everything inside the parentheses is called distributing or the distributive property. This property is used to simplify algebraic expressions by multiplying the external number to each term inside the parentheses.
This method is called quadrat sampling. It involves counting the number of organisms in a small defined area (quadrat), then multiplying that count to estimate the total number of organisms in a larger area based on the assumption that the distribution is homogeneous.
A number being multiplied is the "multiplicand"; the number doing the multiplying is the "multiplier", and the answer is called the, "product".
There is no particular name for it. For example, the frequency and wavelength of electromagnetic rays are related, but multiplying them by the same number, or dividing, makes no sense.
The result of multiplying numbers is called the product.
Yes. This is called the distributive property. For example: a(1 + 2 + 3 + ... + n) = 1a + 2a + 3a ... + na
it is the same as multiplying by 0.4
Squaring for multiplying, and if you are dividing by the same number, you get 1
no, dividing a number is halving it, multiplying iy by 2 is doubling it