Inch :)
5' - phosphate group 3' - hydroxyl group
-3
I meant 6 4 over 5 plus 3 3 over 5
In a DNA strand, the end carrying the phosphate group on the 5' carbon of the sugar molecule is the 5' end, while the end carrying the hydroxyl group on the 3' carbon is the 3' end. To determine which end is which, start reading the sequence from the end labeled with phosphate (5') and moving towards the end labeled with hydroxyl (3').
If you meant (x/5) + 2 = 3x/5 = 1x =5-----------------If you meant x/(5+2) = 3x/(7) = 3x = 21
If you meant (45x^4)(y), then the answer is: (3)(3)(5)(x)(x)(x)(x)(y) If you meant 45 times x times 4 times y, then the answer is: (2)(2)(3)(3)(5)(x)(y)
The answer depends on what is wrong with it. That is, apart from the fact that there are measurement no units for 5 three quarters. And is that meant to be 5+3/4 or 5 lots of 3/4.
i couldn't understand your question that well but if u meant like "5/3" then the answer is 1.666(6 go on for a while)7. or if it were "3/5" .6
3t3 is the same as 9t because multiplication is commutative. 5 * 9t = 45t. If you meant 3t^3, then 3t^3 * 5 = 15t^3.
Assuming that you meant 3 1/2 times 1 2/3, the answer is 5 5/6.
The 3' end of DNA refers to the end of the DNA strand that terminates with a free hydroxyl group attached to the 3' carbon of the deoxyribose sugar. This end serves as the site where DNA polymerase adds new nucleotides during DNA replication in a 5' to 3' direction.