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1x1 is 1. 1x2 is 2. Why is this? Use 2 sentences and briefly explain.

User Amuthan
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2 Answers

27 votes
27 votes

Answer:

"1" multiplied by a "number" is equal to that "number". It is an "Identity. Search it up.

Explanation:

User Jonas Borggren
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16 votes
16 votes

"1 x 1" means whatever you want it to mean. There is nothing that says the operation "x" should be multiplication. There is nothing that says that "1" should even be a number. I could, just to be a regular A-hole, say that "1" is shorthand for a set of elements, and "x" is just a nice way of pairing "1" with itself, and I can call this a domain for a function I am about to define.

However, if we are being totally serious here, "x" means the operation of multiplication and "1" is a commonly understood concept referring to the idea of a single thing by itself. Multiplication is a short-cut for lengthy addition problems.

So 3x4 is a short cut for 3 + 3 + 3 + 3, or equivalently, 4 + 4 + 4. That's pretty much it. How many times do I add up 3? How many times to I add up 4?

So when you ask what is "1 x 1", you are really asking How many times do I add up 1? Well, you add up 1 just 1 time. That gives you 1.

User Grucha
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