Are you going for parenthesization? Strange, yes-- but a word nonetheless.
The process of multiplying a number outside a set of parentheses to everything inside the parentheses is called distributing or the distributive property. This property is used to simplify algebraic expressions by multiplying the external number to each term inside the parentheses.
The distributive property.
No, but it can have parentheses.
There is no property of addition that uses parentheses.
Add multiply what is in parentheses and the number that is on the outside of the parentheses that is to the right or to the left.
There is no property which allows you to do that in all cases. It is only possible in the case of the associative property for addition and multiplication. It does not work for subtraction or division.
The distributive property is a property for multiplying with parentheses. It states that a(b+c)=ab+ac. The means that 3(x+2)=3x+6, for example. Basically, the distributive property says you must multiply everything within the parentheses by the number outside the parentheses.
removing the parentheses in a math problem
Figure it out dummy
Figure it out dummy
It does not use parentheses.
International answer Parentheses: refers to the curved punctuation that we add the to sentence. Parenthesis: Refers to the words that are contained between the two parentheses. Example: Avoid the use of parentheticals in a sentence (that goes for you too), until you know what they are called. ;) Here the parenthesis: -that goes for you too- ...is contained inside the parentheses: -()