Well, honey, the statement that division of a whole number is associative is as false as claiming you can wear a swimsuit in a blizzard. Just take the numbers 10, 5, and 2 for example. (10 ÷ 5) ÷ 2 is not the same as 10 ÷ (5 ÷ 2). So, there you have it - a sassy counterexample for you!
there is not division for the associative property
No, and the word is subtraction, not substraction!
No!
No.
No.
No
Well, honey, the statement that division of a whole number is associative is as false as claiming you can wear a swimsuit in a blizzard. Just take the numbers 10, 5, and 2 for example. (10 ÷ 5) ÷ 2 is not the same as 10 ÷ (5 ÷ 2). So, there you have it - a sassy counterexample for you!
No.
Yes.
No. For example, (81 / 9) / 3 = 9 / 3 = 3 81 / (9 / 3) = 81 / 3 = 27
Yes. Multiplication of integers, of rational numbers, of real numbers, and even of complex numbers, is both commutative and associative.
there is not division for the associative property
No, and the word is subtraction, not substraction!
No you can not use subtraction or division in the associative property.
That would be the associative property. The associative property applies to addition and multiplication, but not to subtraction or division.
Yes. Multiplication of any real numbers has the associative property: (a x b) x c = a x (b x c)