Duplicate Question
The question on this page has been marked as a duplicate question.
Original Question
Use the Associative Property of Addition to rewrite the expression (7+8)+6 as an equivalent expression.(1 point)Asked by cocopuff
Use the Associative Property of Addition to rewrite the expression (7+8)+6 as an equivalent expression.(1 point)
Answers
Answered by
cocopuff
Rewrite the expression 3x+(2y+z) using the Associative Property of Addition.(1
Answered by
cocopuff
Apply the Associative Property of Multiplication to rewrite the expression p⋅(q⋅r) .(1 point)
Answered by
cocopuff
Use the Associative Property to simplify the expression 3x+(x+2) to its simplest equivalent form.(1 point)
Answered by
cocopuff
Use the Associative Property to group like terms together for the expression 9x+(2x+3) . Do not simplify the grouped terms.(1 point)
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
According to the Associative Property of Addition, the way in which numbers are grouped when adding does not change the sum.
For the expression \((7 + 8) + 6\), we can regroup the numbers. For example, we can group \(8\) and \(6\) instead:
\[
7 + (8 + 6)
\]
So, using the Associative Property of Addition, the equivalent expression is:
\[
7 + (8 + 6)
\]
For the expression \((7 + 8) + 6\), we can regroup the numbers. For example, we can group \(8\) and \(6\) instead:
\[
7 + (8 + 6)
\]
So, using the Associative Property of Addition, the equivalent expression is:
\[
7 + (8 + 6)
\]
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
Using the Associative Property of Addition, we can regroup the terms in the expression \(3x + (2y + z)\).
We can choose to group \(3x\) and \(2y\) together instead:
\[
(3x + 2y) + z
\]
So, the expression \(3x + (2y + z)\) can be rewritten as:
\[
(3x + 2y) + z
\]
Both expressions are equivalent due to the Associative Property of Addition.
We can choose to group \(3x\) and \(2y\) together instead:
\[
(3x + 2y) + z
\]
So, the expression \(3x + (2y + z)\) can be rewritten as:
\[
(3x + 2y) + z
\]
Both expressions are equivalent due to the Associative Property of Addition.
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
Using the Associative Property of Multiplication, which states that the way in which factors are grouped does not change the product, we can rewrite the expression \( p \cdot (q \cdot r) \).
We can regroup the factors by changing the grouping to \( (p \cdot q) \cdot r \).
Thus, the expression \( p \cdot (q \cdot r) \) can be rewritten as:
\[
(p \cdot q) \cdot r
\]
Both expressions are equivalent due to the Associative Property of Multiplication.
We can regroup the factors by changing the grouping to \( (p \cdot q) \cdot r \).
Thus, the expression \( p \cdot (q \cdot r) \) can be rewritten as:
\[
(p \cdot q) \cdot r
\]
Both expressions are equivalent due to the Associative Property of Multiplication.
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
To use the Associative Property of Addition to simplify the expression \(3x + (x + 2)\), we can regroup the expression.
We rewrite it as:
\[
(3x + x) + 2
\]
Then, we can combine the like terms \(3x + x\):
\[
(4x) + 2
\]
So the simplified equivalent form is:
\[
4x + 2
\]
This expression is in its simplest form.
We rewrite it as:
\[
(3x + x) + 2
\]
Then, we can combine the like terms \(3x + x\):
\[
(4x) + 2
\]
So the simplified equivalent form is:
\[
4x + 2
\]
This expression is in its simplest form.
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
Using the Associative Property to group like terms together in the expression \(9x + (2x + 3)\), we can rearrange the grouping to emphasize the like terms.
We can group \(9x\) and \(2x\) together, while keeping \(3\) separate:
\[
(9x + 2x) + 3
\]
So, the expression \(9x + (2x + 3)\) can be regrouped as:
\[
(9x + 2x) + 3
\]
This groups the like terms \(9x\) and \(2x\) together without simplifying them.
We can group \(9x\) and \(2x\) together, while keeping \(3\) separate:
\[
(9x + 2x) + 3
\]
So, the expression \(9x + (2x + 3)\) can be regrouped as:
\[
(9x + 2x) + 3
\]
This groups the like terms \(9x\) and \(2x\) together without simplifying them.
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.