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When you're asked to simplify the square root of something that isn't a perfect square like 25 or 16, look for perfect square factors within the number. For example, 75 can be written as 25x3. I'm sure you know 25 to be 5x5, the perfect square of 5. Now we can write 75 as 52x3. Since we're taking the square root, 52 gets moved out of the square root and you can write the final answer as 5 times the square root of 3, the factor that's left. Final answer: 5sqrrt3
Formula of work is always { Work= Force x Distance} so you find the force applied and the distance moved then multiply
At the ball, the dancers gracefully moved across the floor in a lively quadrille.
In the 3 demensiones we use, some use time as a forth, yes. Even traveling trough a wormhole will make you move even though you end up a place that is farther then what you have actually moved the distance you have moved is still positive.
Translation is a slide basically. If you are discussing the translation of a shape, usually the shape has been moved to the side, but not rotated, or inverse. This has always been the simplest for me to explain.
The present perfect forms are have moved and has moved.Examples:We have moved to a new location. (plural subject)He has moved to a new location. (singular subject)
The past perfect tense is had moved.
The past perfect tense is had moved.
When you're asked to simplify the square root of something that isn't a perfect square like 25 or 16, look for perfect square factors within the number. For example, 75 can be written as 25x3. I'm sure you know 25 to be 5x5, the perfect square of 5. Now we can write 75 as 52x3. Since we're taking the square root, 52 gets moved out of the square root and you can write the final answer as 5 times the square root of 3, the factor that's left. Final answer: 5sqrrt3
The future perfect tense of move is will have moved.
The future perfect tense of move is will have moved.
"Had moved" is the past perfect form of "move".
The present perfect forms are have moved and has moved.Examples:We have moved to a new location. (plural subject)He has moved to a new location. (singular subject)
Matter can not change. Its weight always stays the same NO MATTER WHAT, and it can be moved
Goal post are always in the same place on the football field they never moved.
A "regular" conjugation is shown by the word move:Present - I move, you move, we move, they move; he, she it movesPast - movedFuture - will moveAn "irregular" conjugation is shown by the verb see:Present - I see, you see, we see, they see; he, she, it seesPast - sawFuture - will seeThere are other conjugations, such as the "perfect" tenses.- For move, the past participle is moved.The present perfect is have moved or has moved.The past perfect is had moved.The future perfect is will have moved.- For see, the past participle is seen.The present perfect is have seen or has seen.The past perfect is had seen.The future perfect is will have seen.
no