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When you have a negative variable in an equation that you are trying to solve for, you multiply each side of the equation by -1. If it is an inequality such as <, you would flip the sign to > and vice versa.
No, you only flip the inequality sign if you are dividing by a negative number on both sides of the inequality
When you divide both sides of an inequality by a negative number, the inequality sign flips.
because if you didn't the inequality would not be true. ex. -3x<15 when you solve it WITHOUT CHANGING THE SIGN, you get x<-5 when you graph that, a possible answer is -7 If you plug that in to the inequality, you get -3(-7)<15 BUT that's not true! so therefor you need to flip the sign direction :)
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You have to flip the inequality sign. If it is less than(<) it has to become greater than(>). If it is greater than(>), it has to become less than(<). If it is less than equal to(<=), it has to become greater than equal to(>=). If it is greater than equal to(>=)., it must become less than equal to(<=).
Yes you do, you also flip the inequality sign if you multiply by a negative # The > and < signs are strictly the "Greater than" and "Less than" signs. The inequality sign is an = with a / stroke through it. If you divide an inequality by -1 it remains an inequality.
I suspect you mean the signs < and > meaning "less than" or "greater than". (There is no flip of the inequality sign, which is an equals sign with a line through it). You have to flip when you multiply a "greater or less than" eqequation if you multiply the equatiob through by -1. Example: you have 2>1, and -2<-1.
When you have a negative variable in an equation that you are trying to solve for, you multiply each side of the equation by -1. If it is an inequality such as <, you would flip the sign to > and vice versa.
No. Only flip the inequality when multiplying or dividing by a negative number.
No, you only flip the inequality sign if you are dividing by a negative number on both sides of the inequality
Almost. There's one new rule, which is that whenever you multiply or divide by a negative number, you have to flip the inequality sign. To see why, try achieving the same result without this step, using positive factors and subtraction: the equation must effectively flip itself around the sign.
When you multiply or divide the whole equation by a negative number.
When you divide both sides of an inequality by a negative number, the inequality sign flips.
Flip it around
negative flip
A linear inequation is a line whose answers can be defined as anything on the line or anything below or above it. Just imagine it as a linear equation, except with an inequality sign.For example:1/2X + 2 >/= 4X >/=4The answer to this inequality is 4 or anything greater than 4.NOTE:- If the coefficient of X [or in any inequality problem, the coefficient of the X with the largest exponent] is negative, flip the inequality symbol.For example:-X^3 + 8 > 0-X^3 > -8-X > -2x < 2The answer to the above inequality is anything less than 2.Always check your answer!