a squil and a hourse and fish and lots of other animals in an area
Who knows - there appears to be no such word as communative! So maybe it is communative and maybe it is not.If, however, you meant commutative which, is a mathematical term, then the answer is no, subtraction is not commutative.
Communitive means of, or belonging to, a community. It has no meaning in math. Communative does not mean anything - in math or elsewhere.
No idea what the communative property is. The commutative property for addition is that a + b = b + a. Similarly, for multiplication, a*b = b*a
scrolls were either communative, or decorative.
Some examples of the properties of multiplication are the idenity property are EX./ 5*1=5 Then there is the associative property. EX./ 7*(5*6)=5*(6*7) Communative property EX./5*4=4*5 zero property EX./ 5*0=0
communative
5*4 = 4*5
9+4=4+9 OR 9x4=4x9
The communative property is that if you switch digits around in an equation that is multiplication or addition, you get the same outcome anyway. Examples: 6x3=18 3x6=18 4+28=32 28+4=32
Using the communative property of both addition and multiplication, 11+ab could be rewritten as ab+11, 11+ba or ba+11.
communative property is when you are adding or subtracting any numbers it doesnt matter how u write them.....
The property is the same, whether you work with integers, decimals, or fractions.