No. A monomial (watch the spelling, please - only one "no") is a special case of a polynomial. A polynomial may have any number of terms; a monomial has exactly one term.
yes
If a polynomial expression is derived from a word problem it has the same meaning as the word problem. Polynomial expressions that represent scientific laws have the specific meaning of that law.
It is a polynomial (monomial). It is a polynomial (monomial). It is a polynomial (monomial). It is a polynomial (monomial).
No. A polynomial is an expression of more than two algebraic terms, and usually contains different powers of the same variable.
The property of polynomial subtraction that ensures the difference of two polynomials is always a polynomial is known as closure under subtraction. This property states that if you take any two polynomials, their difference will also yield a polynomial. This is because subtracting polynomials involves combining like terms, which results in a polynomial expression that adheres to the same structure as the original polynomials.
A polynomial has 2 or more variables. It can also have a negative exponent and a fractional exponent. It's different from a monomial.****BrandonW****
No. A matrix polynomial is an algebraic expression in which the variable is a matrix. A polynomial matrix is a matrix in which each element is a polynomial.
4, the same as the degree of the polynomial.
A trinomial is a polynomial. All trinomials are polynomials but the opposite is not true. a trinomial= three unlike terms. a polynomial= "many" unlike terms.
yes
If a polynomial expression is derived from a word problem it has the same meaning as the word problem. Polynomial expressions that represent scientific laws have the specific meaning of that law.
I suspect that the answer is a homogeneous polynomial.
For example, if you divide a polynomial of degree 2 by a polynomial of degree 1, you'll get a result of degree 1. Similarly, you can divide a polynomial of degree 4 by one of degree 2, a polynomial of degree 6 by one of degree 3, etc.
irreducible polynomial prime...i know its the same as irreducible but on mymathlab you would select prime
It is a polynomial (monomial). It is a polynomial (monomial). It is a polynomial (monomial). It is a polynomial (monomial).
It means finding numbers (constant terms), or polynomials of the same or smaller order that multiply together to give the original polynomial.
No. A polynomial is an expression of more than two algebraic terms, and usually contains different powers of the same variable.