No, ten is equal to ten. If you see a less than/equal to sign, the statement is true.A less than/equal to sign has a less than sign on top of an equal sign.
An equation is a statement that two quantities are equal, or the same, identical, in value. It is expressed by putting an equal sign (=) between the two quantities. An inequality is a statement that two quantities are not equal, or more specifically, that one is less than the other, or less than or equal to the other. It is expressed with the unequal sign (an equal sign with a slash through it), a less than sign (), or a less than or equal sign or greater than or equal sign. A less than or equal sign looks like a less than sign with an underscore; similarly for the greater than or equal sign.Answer 1A linear equation may be represented by all the points on a straight line.A linear inequality would be represented by all points in the plane on one side or the other of the line which is determined by the corresponding equation. The line itself may or may not be part of the solution.
SymbolName+addition sign, plus sign-subtraction sign, minus signx or ⋅multiplication sign÷ or /division sign=equal≠not equal<less than>greater than≤less than or equal to≥greater than or equal to#number sign( )parentheses&and (ampersand)%percentπpi|x|absolute value of x√square root!factorial±plus or minusˆcaret - to the power of
If there is an equal sign, it is called an equation; if there is a less-than, a less-than-or-equal, a greater-than, or a greater-than-or-equal sign, an inequality; if there is none of these, an expression.
Less than: x<y Greater than: x>y Equal to: x=y There is also less than or equal to, which is the less than symbol with a line over it, as well as greater than or equal to, which is the greater than symbol with a line over it. Not equal to is an equal sign with a slash. About equal to is an equal sign but with squiggly lines intead of straight.
No, ten is equal to ten. If you see a less than/equal to sign, the statement is true.A less than/equal to sign has a less than sign on top of an equal sign.
An inequality must have a greater than sign (>) OR a less than sign (<) OR a greater than or equal to sign (≥) OR a less than or equal to sign (≤).
I've seen less than equal to signs typed on a computer shown as <= but make sure the reader knows you are doing math. If you are writing it with pencil and paper, then use <_ (with the underscore underneath the less than sign)
It means less than or equal to
less than or equal to
The "underlined" less than sign is actually a sign meaning "less than or equal to" and it is the equal to part which looks like an underline.
It's the "less than" sign [ < ] above the "equals" sign [ = ].≤When you see it, you read it " ... less than or equal to ... ". That's the same as " ... no more than ... "
Greater than >Less than written on top of =.
The opposite of less than or equal to is greater than or equal.And also:The opposite of greater than or equal to is less than or equal.
Less than or equal to. :)
An equation is a statement that two quantities are equal, or the same, identical, in value. It is expressed by putting an equal sign (=) between the two quantities. An inequality is a statement that two quantities are not equal, or more specifically, that one is less than the other, or less than or equal to the other. It is expressed with the unequal sign (an equal sign with a slash through it), a less than sign (), or a less than or equal sign or greater than or equal sign. A less than or equal sign looks like a less than sign with an underscore; similarly for the greater than or equal sign.Answer 1A linear equation may be represented by all the points on a straight line.A linear inequality would be represented by all points in the plane on one side or the other of the line which is determined by the corresponding equation. The line itself may or may not be part of the solution.
SymbolName+addition sign, plus sign-subtraction sign, minus signx or ⋅multiplication sign÷ or /division sign=equal≠not equal<less than>greater than≤less than or equal to≥greater than or equal to#number sign( )parentheses&and (ampersand)%percentπpi|x|absolute value of x√square root!factorial±plus or minusˆcaret - to the power of