Stage 5 · Negative & Rational Numbers

5.5  Multiplying and Dividing Rational Numbers

Why a negative times a negative is positive — and how division rides along for free.

For ages 11–13 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 3 of 5 in this lesson: 5.5.3 The laws of multiplication and the distributive law

5.5.3 The laws of multiplication and the distributive law

The friendly properties you met for whole numbers survive the move to negatives untouched. Multiplication is commutative — you may swap the order, (−4)×7 = 7×(−4) — and associative — you may regroup, so a long product can be reordered to make the arithmetic easy.

The most powerful is the distributive law, which links multiplication and addition:

a × (b + c)  =  a × b  +  a × c

It works both ways. Read left to right, you open the brackets — handy even when there are negatives inside:

Worked example — opening the brackets

−2(3 + (−5))  =  −2×3  +  −2×(−5)  =  −6 + 10  =  4.
Check the short way: 3 + (−5) = −2 first, then −2×−2 = 4. Same answer. ✓

Read right to left, you pull out a common factor — the secret behind fast mental arithmetic:

Worked example — pulling out a common factor

7×8 + 7×2  =  7×(8 + 2)  =  7×10  =  70.
Both 56 and 14 share the factor 7, so collect it once and add the easy 8 + 2 = 10.

width = a a × b a × c b c a(b+c) = ab + ac
An area picture of a(b+c) = ab + ac: one rectangle of height b+c splits along the line into a piece worth ab and a piece worth ac.
🎮 Try itDistribute it

Set a (it may be negative), b, and c. See a(b+c) split into ab + ac, and check that both routes reach the same total.

a -2
b 3
c -5
eastmath.com · 5.5 Multiplying and Dividing Rational Numbers · 5.5.3 The laws of multiplication and the distributive law