Commutative property facts for kids
The commutative property says that the order of the numbers when adding or multiplying can be changed without changing the answer. For example, both and
are equal to 10, and both
and
are equal to 35. This can be done with any numbers, or with more than two numbers.
The definition of commutative property of addition is . a and b are variables and can be any number.
Some operations like dividing are not commutative. For instance, is 2, but
is
. Subtraction is not commutative either:
is 4, but
is negative 4.
In higher mathematics like calculus, there are other commutative operations besides adding and multiplying.
Images for kids
See also
In Spanish: Conmutatividad para niños
Black History Month on Kiddle
Prominent African-American Labor Activists
![]() | Isaac Myers |
![]() | D. Hamilton Jackson |
![]() | A. Philip Randolph |
All content from Kiddle encyclopedia articles (including the article images and facts) can be freely used under Attribution-ShareAlike license, unless stated otherwise. Cite this article:
Commutative property Facts for Kids. Kiddle Encyclopedia.