No, order of operations and the fact that subtraction is not commutative. (The first one is 10+25=35 and the other is -25-10= -35.)
2006-10-30 08:02:23
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answer #1
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answered by raz 5
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No. 10-5(-5) = 10 + 25 = 35 and 5(-5)-10 = -25 -10 = -35
2006-10-30 16:03:21
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answer #2
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answered by Double Nickels 1
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No. The answers will be equal in magnitude but opposite in sign:
10-5(-5)=10+25=35
5(-5)-10=-25-10=-35
2006-10-30 16:01:54
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answer #3
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answered by yupchagee 7
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No, if you follow the order of opperations this is how each should look:
10-5(-5) = 10+25 = 35
and
5(-5)-10 = -25-10 = -35
2006-10-30 16:09:14
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answer #4
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answered by Inferno13 6
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NO
10-5(-5) = 35
and
5(-5)-10 = -35
2006-10-30 16:08:04
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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No its not...10-5(-5)..lets solve it..Open the brackets first..5-5 is 0.. 10-0 is 10..
In 5(-5)-10, 5-5 is 0...Than 0-10 is -10. So number 1 is 0 and number 2 is -10
Aint I good at MATHS!
2006-10-30 16:04:01
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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no
10-5(-5)=10+25=35
5(-5)-10=-25-10=-35
2006-10-30 16:14:20
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answer #7
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answered by red 2
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No. The expressions evaluate to 35 and -35, respectively.
2006-10-30 16:02:47
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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no
10-5(-5)
10+25=35
5(-5)-10
0-10
=-10
2006-10-30 16:10:38
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answer #9
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answered by J 2
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if you mean -5*(-5), first one is 35 second one is -35
2006-10-30 16:03:03
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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