What is an instructive example of a set $X$ equipped with two monoid structures $(X,+,0)$, $(X,\cdot,1)$, such that $+$ is commutative, the distributive laws hold, but $0 \cdot x = 0$ or $x \cdot 0 = 0$ do not hold?
Notice that in case these two absorbing laws hold, one calls $(X,+,0,\cdot,1)$ a semiring. At first sight, it might be surprising that these laws have to be imposed, but this is quite natural from a more general point of view, namely the multiplication $\cdot : X \times X \to X$ should be an additive monoid homomorphism in each variable, and it is known that one has to demand that monoid homomorphisms preserve the neutral element.