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  1. When kids are learning two-digit addition and subtraction, one of the concepts they'll encounter is regrouping, which is also known as borrowing and carrying, carry-over, or column math.[1]
  2. Before tackling carry-over math, it's important to know about place value, sometimes called base-10.[1]
  3. Addition is where the carry-over principle of math comes into play.[1]
  4. In elementary arithmetic, a carry is a digit that is transferred from one column of digits to another column of more significant digits.[2]
  5. Traditionally, carry is taught in the addition of multi-digit numbers in the 2nd or late first year of elementary school.[2]
  6. The same carry bit is also generally used to indicate borrows in subtraction, though the bit's meaning is inverted due to the effects of two's complement arithmetic.[2]
  7. Normally, a carry bit value of "1" signifies that an addition overflowed the ALU, and must be accounted for when adding data words of lengths greater than that of the CPU.[2]
  8. So what we do is we write the 6 in the 1's place and we carry the 1.[3]
  9. If it's a two-digit answer you carry the left most digit up to the next column.[3]
  10. I would carry it.[3]
  11. But there's no where to carry it to, so I write it down just like that.[3]
  12. When we learned about addition, we used the term carry.[4]
  13. To be honest, we prefer the term carry, but you need to say the word your teacher wants to hear.[4]
  14. For example: in decimal addition, if you add 8 + 2 you get ten, which you write as 10; in the sum this gives a digit 0 and a carry of 1.[5]
  15. Adding 0 and 1, we get 1 (no carry).[5]
  16. ) we can write out the calculation (the results of any carry is shown along the top row, in italics).[6]
  17. In this case the extra carry from the most significant bit has no meaning.[6]

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  • [{'LEMMA': 'carry'}]