Use exponent laws to explain why 3ln(2) is equivalent to ln(8). Homework help pls?

My teacher writes her own questions on assignments, and most of the time I don't understand them, so can you help me. This is logarithmic math, and I swear we literally didn't learn the exponent law in class lmao, Thanks. 

Daniel H2021-04-06T23:19:15Z

aln(b) = ln(b^a)
8 = 2^3
ln(8) = ln(2^3) = 3ln(2)

fcas802021-04-06T20:48:01Z

LN(8) = LN(2*2*2) = LN(2)+LN(2)+LN(2) = 3LN(2)