other names for the input of a function are: 1. x 2. domain
In the absence of any other information, 40 is in its lowest terms.
A comparison in math terms is when you see if two problems are equal to each other.
A term is a constant number, a variable, or a variable with a coefficient. Terms are separated from each other by addition or subtraction signs. For example, -7x is a term. 3xy is a term. 4b+m is two terms.
one that won't talk to one another because they don't like each other... NO, seriously, they are terms that are different. For example x^2+2x+3x-4x^2. The x^2 terms are like terms and the x^2 terms and the x terms and unlike because they are different. Just like x and y, or apples and oranges.
varibles
Feline
This is a statement; it is not a question.
A Restaurant can variously be called a Cafeteria, a Tea Rooms, an Eatery, a Mess, a Canteen ... and many other terms.
The other two names for confession are penance and reconciliation. These terms are often used interchangeably in Christian denominations to refer to the sacrament of confessing sins and receiving forgiveness.
'Wild swine' and 'wild pigs' are interchangeable terms with 'warthogs' but their scientific, binomial name is Phacochoerus aethiopicus.
Jesus referred to his disciples by many different names. First and foremost, he called them by their first names. He also called them "friends", "brothers", and many symbolic terms inside of His parables, such as "branches", and other such names.
The three forms of a Prolog term are atoms, numbers, and compound terms. Atoms are constants or names, numbers can be integers or floating-point numbers, and compound terms are expressions that combine other terms using functors and parentheses.
five
Some slang terms for amphetamines are bennies, uppers, whiz, lid proppers, rippers, and speed. Amphetamines are drugs that are stimulants.
4 : 8 : 6 in terms of letters in their names. If you wanted the ratio of some other characteristic you should have specified which.
"Defined items" are defined in terms of "undefined terms".