7
56 64 are two positive integers. They do not illustrate the distributive property.
568
2x2 2x8 4x16= 64
8*37 = 8*(30+7) = 8*30 + 8*7 [that is using the distributive property] = 240 + 56 = 296
The distributive property is a red herring for this question: you do not need it! The distributive property is applicable when you have two binary operations - multiplication and addition, for example. This question has nothing of the sort. Perhaps you meant some other property.
56 64 are two positive integers. They do not illustrate the distributive property.
568
12*56 Use the distributive property on 12: (10+2)*56 = 10*56 + 2*56 Use the distributive property on 56 twice: 10*(50+6) + 2*(50+6) = 10*50 + 10*6 + 2*50 + 2*6 = 500 + 60 + 100 + 12 = 672
2x2 2x8 4x16= 64
112
8(3 + 8)
8x18=80+64
The GCF of 24 and 64 is 8. You use the distributive property to show another way to write the sum. 8(3 + 8)
8*37 = 8*(30+7) = 8*30 + 8*7 [that is using the distributive property] = 240 + 56 = 296
The distributive property is a red herring for this question: you do not need it! The distributive property is applicable when you have two binary operations - multiplication and addition, for example. This question has nothing of the sort. Perhaps you meant some other property.
The distributive property is a characteristic that two mathematical operators may have. Numbers do not have a distributive property.
Numbers do not have a distributive property. The distributive property is an attribute of one arithmetical operation over another. The main example is the distributive property of multiplication over addition.