i need some help with the math articles please
You can get them at any college library. There are many math journals. Also, some are available on line.
Read, practice, ask yourself questions, look for articles and videos to get additional information.
In Spanish, the word for math is "matemáticas," which is feminine. Therefore, you would use feminine articles and adjectives with it, such as "la" (the) and "una" (a). For example, you would say "la matemática es interesante" (math is interesting).
There are tons of great math journals out there. If you're hoping for your article to get published smoothly and efficiently, you might want to try submitting it to Journal of Applied Mathematics and Physics and Applied Mathematics.
it is a math a matic way of showing the way phisic law and may of us have that law just right here with us
there are tons of them! If you go to google news, type in precalculus you will be surprised how many you gdt.
Newspapers may contain math-related content such as financial data, statistics, graphs, and charts. Additionally, newspapers often present numerical information in articles, such as percentages, figures, and calculations.
You can get your high school GED at http://www.gedonlinediploma.com/. You can find more information in general on http://math-and-reading-help-for-kids.org/articles/High_School_GED:_How_do_I_Earn_my_High_School_GED.html.
indefinite articles - a, an, one definite articles - the this that those these interrogative articles - which what who
The Articles of Confederation.
The Articles
Grace Chisholm Young was the first woman to receive a doctorate in Germany. Along with her husband, William Young, she helped publish more than 220 math articles, books, and papers. She won the Gamble prize in 1915 for her paper on the foundations of calculus. For more information - see the related link.