1st Grade Math › Understanding the Associative Property
Which is an example of associative property?
and
and
and
and
The associative property says that you can group a set of numbers in a series, and still get the same answer. If we group to get
, and then add
we get a sum of
.
Which is an example of the associative property?
and
and
and
and
The associative property says that, when you are only adding or only multiplying, the way you group the items in a series does not matter. Given 6 + 3 + 2 = 11, whether you group (6 + 3) + 2 or 6 + (3 + 2), the outcome does not change as the order in which you sum the numbers does not matter.
Which is an example of associative property?
and
and
and
and
The associative property says that you can group a set of numbers in a series, and still get the same answer. If we group to get
, and then add
we get a sum of
.
Which is an example of associative property?
and
and
and
and
The associative property says that you can group a set of numbers in a series, and still get the same answer. If we group to get
, and then add
we get a sum of
.
Which is an example of associative property?
and
and
and
and
The associative property says that you can group a set of numbers in a series, and still get the same answer. If we group to get
, and then add
we get a sum of
.
Which is an example of associative property?
and
and
and
and
The associative property says that you can group a set of numbers in a series, and still get the same answer. If we group to get
, and then add
we get a sum of
.