- 8Y5
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- 8 is the coefficient.
The term is in the fifth degree.
The Y, of course, is the variable base.
There's no way for me to tell until you show methe polynomial, or at least the term of degree 1 .
The numerical coefficient of it is 2 .
The numerical factor is known as the coefficient of a term.
The literal coefficient is always the "letter" in the term. Therefore in this equation the "Literal Coefficient is "Y"
In the term 3x + 5, the 3 is the coefficient.
For a single term, the "degree" refers to the power. The coefficient is the number in front of (to the left of) the x.
It is the Coefficient. It only refers to the given term that it is front. e.g. 2x^2 - 3x + 1 The '2' in front of 'x^2' only refers to 'x^2'. The '-3' in front of 'x' is the coefficient of '-3' The '1' is a constant.
There's no way for me to tell until you show methe polynomial, or at least the term of degree 1 .
Answer thi What is the coefficient of the term of degree 4 in this polynomial?2x5 + 3x4 - x3 + x2 - 12A. 1 B. 2 C. 3 D. 4 s question…
-2.
If by "xn" you mean ax^n then the answer is "a"
6
The numerical coefficient of it is 2 .
The number part in a term is often called the "coefficient".The number part in a term is often called the "coefficient".The number part in a term is often called the "coefficient".The number part in a term is often called the "coefficient".
A coefficient is a number paired with a variable. For example, in the equation4x+2x=16, the numbers 4 and 2 would be coefficients.Coefficients are the factors (usually constants) which are multiplied by the variables in each term. For example, in a second-degree polynomial equation,y = ax2 + bx + ca is called the quadratic coefficient, b is the linear coefficient and c is the constant term.
There is no polynomial below.(Although I'll bet there was one wherever you copied the question from.)
The numerical factor of a term is called the "coefficient."