In mathematics, a cube root of a number, denoted or x1/3, is a number a such that a3 = x. All real numbers (except zero) have exactly one real cube root and a pair ofcomplex conjugate roots, and all nonzero complex numbers have three distinct complex cube roots. For example, the real cube root of 8 is 2, because 23 = 8. All the cube roots of −27iare
The cube root operation is not associative or distributive with addition or subtraction.
The cube root operation is associative with exponentiation and distributive with multiplication and division if considering only real numbers, but not always if considering complex numbers, for example:
but
taco chinnese ears
greek phono means voice graph means write or engrave
bio [from greek βίος (=life)] + graphy [from greek γράφω (=write)]
Roots are the grappling hooks for plants.
The question is ambiguous, but since it's hard to see how one language's grammar can be based on another's root-words, I'm going to assume that it means "Is the English word 'grammar' based on Greek roots?"The answer to this question is yes. The word "grammar" is from the Greek word gramma, which means "letter" and is related to the Greek work "to write", which is graphein.
The two main roots in math are square roots and cubed roots. The square root is what number squared is your original number. For example the square root of 25 is 5 because 5 x 5 is 25. For cubed roots it is what numbered cubed is your original number.
When something is cubed it is written as:X3
The cubed root of 27 is 3. The cubed root of 8 is 2.
4 cubed is 43 2 cubed is 23 etc
6 cubed = 63
73
8³
There are 3 cube roots of 27. There are 2 square roots of 27 ( or any real number ). There are 4 fourth roots of 27 and so on:)
The cube root of 1.728 is 1.2
8 cubed in standard form is 83
103 = 1000
Only one (minus 5).