Like terms.
It depend entirely on the expressions you are comparing.
No. Like terms should contain the same variable or variables, raised to the same powers. Like terms are those that can be combined by addition or subtraction.
Terms that contain the same variables raised to the same powers are called "like terms." For example, (3x^2y) and (5x^2y) are like terms because they both include the variables (x) and (y) raised to the same powers (2 and 1, respectively). Like terms can be combined by adding or subtracting their coefficients, which simplifies expressions in algebra.
Terms that have the same variables raised to the same powers are called like terms. Like terms can be combined through addition or subtraction because they represent the same quantity in algebraic expressions. For example, (3x^2) and (5x^2) are like terms, while (3x^2) and (4x) are not.
No, the sum of two monomials is not always a monomial. A monomial is a single term that consists of a coefficient and variables raised to non-negative integer powers. When two monomials are added, they can only be combined if they have the same variables raised to the same powers; otherwise, the result is a polynomial with multiple terms, not a single monomial.
like terms
Like terms
like terms
They are known as like terms.
Identical terms are expressions that contain the same variables raised to the same powers and coefficients. For example, in the expression (3xy) and (3xy), both terms are identical because they have the same coefficient (3) and the same variables (x and y) in the same form. Similarly, (5a^2b) and (5a^2b) are identical terms.
They are called "like terms".
They are terms in which each of the variables is raised to the same power (or exponent).