2
This is called an inequality. If x squared is greater than or equal to 49, then x is plus or minus 7 or greater than plus 7 or less than - 7.
Six less than a number w squared is written algebraically as w2 - 6
The set of negative integers.
the number is 24.. 24 is one less than 25 which is 5 squared when doubled its 48, which is one less than 7 squared (49)
You don't. There's no question there, and nothing that needs solving. "16 less than x squared" is written as (x2 - 16)
Yes because 7 squared is equal to 49
That factors to (x - 6)(x + 3) x is less than or equal to -3, 6
The solution set for the equation 7 * w <= 28 (where <= means less than or equal to) with regard to the unknown variable w, is the set of numbers less than or equal to 4. So the answer is yes since 4 is less than or equal to 4, or simply yes since 7 * 4 = 28 which is smaller than or equal to 28.
Since 0.50 squared equals 0.25, 0.50 squared is less than 0.50.
"x3" is not an inequality. An inequality will have one of the following signs: less-than, less-than-or-equal, greater-than, greater-than-or-equal. for example: 3x - 5 < 15
Why is 0.5 squared answer 0.25. Is the answer less than the question?
The two inequalities define a region of the coordinate plane: there is no unique solution.
0
how about i dont know
Let's reverse the question - Is a over b less than a squared over b squared? Answer - Only when a is less than b example 1: a is less than b a = 2 a squared = 4 b = 3 b squared = 9 2 / 3 = .6666 4 / 9 = .444444 2 / 3 is greater than 4 / 9 example 2: a is equal to b a = 2 a squared = 4 b = 2 b squared = 4 2 / 4 = .5 2 / 4 = .5 2 / 4 is equal to 2 / 4 example 3: a is greater than b a = 3 a squared = 9 b = 2 b squared = 4 3 / 2 = 1.5 9 / 4 = 2.25 3 / 2 is less than 9 / 4 - wjs1632 -
We say a solution to an inequality f(x) >= g(x) , is the set of all x such that the in equality is satisfied. It will look like this: For all x >= (<=) something, the condition is satisfied. Now, write your question out. x <= 5^2 Looks like a solution to me.
You can use the Not function or the <> operator, which is the < and the > beside each other. To see if the values in A1 and A2 are not equal to each other, you can type: =A1<>A2 or =Not(A1=A2) In each case they will either give you TRUE if they are not equal or FALSE if they are equal, in the cell that you enter the formula into.