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multiplication-addition-subtraction-division
Addition and subtraction are inverse operations, as one undoes the effect of the other; for example, adding a number and then subtracting the same number returns you to the original value. Similarly, multiplication and division are also inverse operations, as multiplying a number and then dividing by the same number returns you to the original value. Thus, the pairs of inverse operations are addition with subtraction and multiplication with division.
The fundamental operations are operations in arithmetic: addition, subtraction, multiplication and division. These are the same whatever the base of the number system.
Because multiplication and division are inverse operations. And the reciprocal of a number is its multiplicative inverse.
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There is no real difference between the two operations. Division by a scalar (a number) is the same as multiplication by its reciprocal. Thus, division by 14 is the same as multiplication by (1/14).
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Multiplication, Division, Subtraction, Addition and the carrot(^) making the following number an exponent or exponential number
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If defined, they are inverse operations. However, multiplication and division is a somewhat flawed example because division by 0 is not defined. So, if you have a number x, then x*0 = 0 but 0/0 is not x: it is not defined.
Yes, multiplication and division are inverse operations. When you multiply a number by its reciprocal (or multiplicative inverse), you get 1. Similarly, when you divide a number by itself, you also get 1.
addition multiplication division subtraction