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The Associative Property of Multiplication states that the way in which numbers are grouped in multiplication does not change their product. In mathematical terms, this is expressed as:
\((a \cdot b) \cdot c = a \cdot (b \cdot c)\)
Among the options you've provided, the one that demonstrates the Associative Property of Multiplication is:
\((3\cdot5)\cdot2 = 3\cdot(5\cdot2)\)
This shows that regardless of how you group the numbers, the result remains the same.