there is more than 1 correct answer to that question. (-35, -16, -9, -5, 0, 5, 9, 16, and 35) all allow the equation to be factored.
hope that helps
The value of a polynomial is determined by that of the variable.
A value of the variable when the polynomial has a value of 0. Equivalently, the value of the variable when the graph of the polynomial intersects the variable axis (usually the x-axis).
Evaluating a polynomial is finding the value of the polynomial for a given value of the variable, usually denoted by x. Solving a polynomial equation is finding the value of the variable, x, for which the polynomial equation is true.
The Degree (for a polynomial with one variable) is the largest exponent of that variable.
The degree of a polynomial is the highest power of the variable.
The term in a polynomial without a variable is called a "constant term." It represents a fixed value and does not change with the variable(s) in the polynomial. For example, in the polynomial (2x^2 + 3x + 5), the constant term is 5.
The Degree (for a polynomial with one variable, like x) is the largest exponent of that variable.
The degree of a polynomial is the highest exponent on any independent variable in the polynomial.
No. A polynomial has positive powers of the variable.
No. A matrix polynomial is an algebraic expression in which the variable is a matrix. A polynomial matrix is a matrix in which each element is a polynomial.
Those words refer to the degree, or highest exponent that modifies a variable, or the polynomial.Constant=No variables in the polynomialLinear=Variable raised to the first powerQuadratic=Variable raised to the second power (or "squared")Cubic=Variable raised to the third power (or "cubed")Quartic=Variable raised to the fourth powerQuintic=Variable raised to the fifth powerAnything higher than that is known as a "6th-degree" polynomial, or "21st-degree" polynomial. It all depends on the highest exponent in the polynomial. Remember, exponents modifying a constant (normal number) do not count.
Substitute that value of the variable and evaluate the polynomial.