i believe it is identity property of multiplication
The property of 1 as the multiplicative identity.
Commutativity (or Abelian) property of multiplication.
1 goes into 7 seven times. This is because when dividing 7 by 1, the result is 7 with no remainder. In other words, 1 can be multiplied by 7 to get 7.
What is 7 times 1/2
7 times 8 is 56 then you multiply 56 times 1=56
The property of 1 as the multiplicative identity.
identity. one is the identity multiplier
Commutativity (or Abelian) property of multiplication.
Mainly the commutative property. But the fact that 30*8*7 is unambiguous and you do not need to write (30*8)*7 or 30*(8*7) is due to the associative property.
This is an example of the commutative property of multiplication.
Commutative property.
This is an example of the Commutative Property of Multiplication. Simply put, this means you can change the order, and the result in the same answer. {a times b= b times a}And any number multiplied by 1 is the number itself. This is the Identity Property of Multiplication.But if you put it into words it would be "1 group of 7" and the other would be "7 groups of 1"Again, they result in the same answer of 7. In both "seven groups of one" and "one group of seven" you have seven items, granted one is split up into groups of 1 item, you still have seven.
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The answer is 1. 1 times 7 equals 7. 1 X 7 = 7
No.
The identity property of multiplication is illustrated.
To find the product of 7 and 63 using the distributive property, you can break down 63 into more manageable parts. For example, you can express 63 as 60 + 3. Then, apply the distributive property: (7 \times 63 = 7 \times (60 + 3) = 7 \times 60 + 7 \times 3). This simplifies to (420 + 21), which equals 441.