What are arithmetic properties?

Arithmetic properties are the rules that numbers follow when you add or multiply them, like how friends behave when they play together.

Imagine you're playing with blocks. If you have 3 red blocks and you get 2 blue ones, it doesn’t matter if you count all the red first or all the blue first, you still end up with 5 blocks total. That’s the commutative property, like swapping places with a friend in line.

Now, say you’re stacking blocks. If you have 2 rows of 3 blocks each, that makes 6 blocks total. It doesn’t matter if you think of it as 2 groups of 3 or 3 groups of 2, the result is still 6. That’s the commutative property of multiplication, like trading toys with a friend and still having fun.

If you’re adding more than two numbers, like 1 + 2 + 3, it doesn’t matter if you add 1 + 2 first or 2 + 3 first, you’ll still get 6. That’s the associative property, like how friends group up for games, no one cares who starts the game.

These rules help make math feel fair and predictable, just like your favorite game with your friends!

Take the quiz →

Examples

  1. Adding apples and oranges to understand the commutative property
  2. Grouping numbers for easier addition (associative property)
  3. Distributing cookies evenly among friends (distributive property)

Ask a question

See also

Discussion

Recent activity